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Alternative Genetic Pathways in Parathyroid Tumorigenesis*
Author(s) -
Filip Farnebo,
Soili Kytölä,
Bin Tean Teh,
Trisha Dwight,
Fung Ki Wong,
Anders Höög,
Maria Elvius,
Wassif S. Wassif,
Norman W. Thompson,
LarsOve Farnebo,
Kerstin Sandelin,
Catharina Larsson
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jcem.84.10.6057
Subject(s) - men1 , loss of heterozygosity , comparative genomic hybridization , biology , cancer research , locus (genetics) , carcinogenesis , germline mutation , mutation , chromosome , multiple endocrine neoplasia , genetics , gene , pathology , medicine , allele
In this study 44 parathyroid tumors from 26 sporadic cases, 10 cases previously given irradiation to the neck, and 8 familial cases were screened for sequence copy number alterations by comparative genomic hybridization. In the sporadic adenomas, commonly occurring minimal regions of loss could be defined to chromosome 11 (38%), 15q15-qter (27%), and 1p34-pter (19%), whereas gains preferentially involved 19p13.2-pter (15%) and 7pter-qter (12%). Multiple aberrations were found in sporadic tumors with a somatic mutation and/or loss of heterozygosity of the MEN1 gene. The irradiation-associated tumors also showed multiple comparative genomic hybridization alterations and frequent losses of 11q (50%), and subsequent analysis of the MEN1 gene demonstrated mutations in 4 of 8 cases (50%). The adenomas from familial cases showed few alterations, and in 3 of these tumors a gain of 19p13.2-pter was seen as the only aberration. In this study numerical copy number alterations were frequently detected in sporadic and irradiation-associated parathyroid adenomas, although these tumors are benign. The majority of these alterations were found in tumors with confirmed involvement of the MEN1 gene locus in agreement with a role of the MEN1 gene in genomic stability. Furthermore, the frequent occurrence of MEN1 mutations (50%) in irradiation-associated parathyroid tumors suggests that inactivation of the MEN1 gene is an important genetic alteration involved in the development of parathyroid tumors in postirradiation patients.

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