Clues to the Pathogenesis of Familial Colorectal Cancer

Lauri A. Aaltonen(University of Helsinki), Païvi Peltomäki(University of Helsinki), Fredrick S. Leach(Johns Hopkins University), Pertti Sistonen(Finnish Red Cross), Lea Pylkkänen(University of Helsinki), Jukka‐Pekka Mecklin(Central Finland Health Care District), Heikki Järvinen(Helsinki University Hospital), Steven M. Powell(Johns Hopkins University), Jin Jen(Johns Hopkins University), Stanley R. Hamilton(Johns Hopkins University), Gloria M. Petersen(Johns Hopkins University), Kenneth W. Kinzler(Johns Hopkins University), Bert Vogelstein(Johns Hopkins University), Albert de la Chapelle(University of Helsinki)
Science
May 7, 1993
Cited by 2,718

Abstract

A predisposition to colorectal cancer is shown to be linked to markers on chromosome 2 in some families. Molecular features of "familial" cancers were compared with those of sporadic colon cancers. Neither the familial nor sporadic cancers showed loss of heterozygosity for chromosome 2 markers, and the incidence of mutations in KRAS, P53, and APC was similar in the two groups of tumors. Most of the familial cancers, however, had widespread alterations in short repeated DNA sequences, suggesting that numerous replication errors had occurred during tumor development. Thirteen percent of sporadic cancers had identical abnormalities and these cancers shared biologic properties with the familial cases. These data suggest a mechanism for familial tumorigenesis different from that mediated by classic tumor suppressor genes.


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