Genetic mapping and DNA sequence-based analysis of deleted regions on chromosome 16 involved in progression of bladder cancer from occult preneoplastic conditions to invasive disease.

TitleGenetic mapping and DNA sequence-based analysis of deleted regions on chromosome 16 involved in progression of bladder cancer from occult preneoplastic conditions to invasive disease.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2001
AuthorsYoon, DS, Li, L, Zhang, RD, Kram, A, Ro, JY, Johnston, D, Grossman, HB, Scherer, S, Czerniak, B
JournalOncogene
Volume20
Issue36
Pagination5005-14
Date Published2001 Aug 16
ISSN0950-9232
KeywordsAged, Chromosome Mapping, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 16, Disease Progression, DNA, Neoplasm, Genes, Tumor Suppressor, Genetic Markers, Humans, Loss of Heterozygosity, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Precancerous Conditions, Sequence Deletion, Tissue Distribution, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms, Urine
Abstract

Histologic and genetic mapping with 30 hypervariable markers mapped to chromosome 16 were performed on 234 DNA samples of five cystectomy specimens from patients with invasive bladder cancer. Allelic losses of individual markers were related to microscopically identified precursor conditions in the entire bladder mucosa and invasive cancer. Their significance for the development and progression of neoplasia from in situ preneoplastic conditions to invasive disease was analysed by the nearest neighbor algorithm and binomial maximum likelihood analysis. Using this approach we identified five distinct regions of allelic losses defined by their flanking markers and predicted size as follows. p13.3(D16S418-D16S406, 1.2 cM), p13.1(D16S748-D16S287, 12.9 cM), q12 1(D16S409-D16S514, 24.0 cM), q22.1 (D16S496-D16S515, 5.4 cM), and q24 (D16S507-D16S511, 5.9 cM and D16S402-D16S413, 17.4 cM). The regions mapping to p13.1 and q24 were involved in early intraurothelial phases of bladder neoplasia such as mild to moderate dysplasia. On the other hand the deleted region mapping to p13.3 was involved in progression of severe dysplasia/carcinoma in situ to invasive bladder cancer. Testing of markers that exhibited statistically significant LOH in relation to progression of neoplasia from precursor conditions to invasive cancer on 28 tumors and voided urine samples from 25 patients with bladder cancer revealed that q12.1 showed LOH in 46.4% of tumor and 32.0% of voided urine samples. The LOH of a single marker D16S541 could be detected in approximately 28% of tumors and 20% of voided urine samples of patients with bladder cancer. These data imply that the deleted region centered around marker D16S541 spanning approximately 10 cM and flanked by D16S409 and D16S415 contains a novel putative tumor suppressor gene or genes playing an important role in the development of human bladder cancer. To facilitate more precise positional mapping and identification of pathogenetically relevant genes, we analysed of human genome contig and sequence databases spanning the deleted regions. Multiple known candidate genes and several smaller gene-rich areas mapping to the target regions of chromosome 16 were identified.

DOI10.1038/sj.onc.1204612
Alternate JournalOncogene
PubMed ID11526485
Grant ListR29CA66723 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
UO-1 CA85078 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States

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