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Vitamin D Receptor as a Candidate Tumor-Suppressor Gene in Severe Hyperparathyroidism of Uremia1
Author(s) -
Suzanne B. Brown,
Tamika T. Brierley,
Nallasivam Palanisamy,
Isidro B. Salusky,
William G. Goodman,
Maria Luisa Brandi,
Tilman B. Drüeke,
E. Sarfati,
Pablo Ureña,
R. S. K. Chaganti,
J. Wesley Pike,
Andrew Arnold
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jcem.85.2.6426
Subject(s) - calcitriol receptor , cancer research , biology , hyperparathyroidism , parathyroid chief cell , endocrinology , uremia , vitamin d and neurology , medicine , parathyroid hormone , calcium
Most chronic renal failure patients with severe refractory hyperparathyroidism harbor at least one monoclonal parathyroid tumor, but the specific acquired genetic defects that confer this clonal selective advantage remain poorly understood. Somatic inactivation of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene could contribute to clonal outgrowth, because a parathyroid cell containing this lesion would have an impaired response to the antiproliferative influence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. Furthermore, diminished expression of VDR protein has been described in uremia-associated parathyroid tumors. Therefore, to assess VDR gene inactivation's potential pathogenetic role in this disease, we rigorously analyzed the VDR gene in 59 parathyroid tumors surgically resected from uremic patients. First, Southern blotting and/or PCR analyses of 29 tumor samples from 14 genetically informative patients revealed no allelic losses at the VDR locus. Next, direct DNA sequencing of all VDR splice junctions, associated intronic sequences, and virtually the entire VDR-coding region for all 59 tumors revealed no acquired mutations. Last, 37 tumor DNA samples were subjected to comparative genomic hybridization, and no chromosomal losses in the VDR region (12cen-q12) were observed. These observations suggest that inactivating defects within the VDR gene do not commonly contribute to the primary pathogenesis of severe refractory hyperparathyroidism in uremia.

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