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Variability of Ha-ras (codon 12) proto-oncogene mutations in diverse thyroid cancers
Author(s) -
Mourad Bouras,
Jacques Bertholon,
N Dutrieux-Berger,
Parviz Parvaz,
C. Paulin,
A Revol
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.897
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1479-683X
pISSN - 0804-4643
DOI - 10.1530/eje.0.1390209
Subject(s) - point mutation , biology , mutation , gene , thyroid , adenoma , oncogene , malignant transformation , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , cell cycle
Structural alterations to proto-oncogene sequences may be involved in the pathogenesis of human thyroid neoplasms. We studied 128 thyroid tumours (35 benign and 93 malignant) for ras gene point mutations in three different codons (12, 13 and 61) using a restriction fragment length polymorphism technique and direct sequencing of double-stranded DNA on polymerase chain-reaction-amplified tumour DNA. We found a high frequency of ras mutation for the Ha-ras codon 12 in follicular adenomas (7 of 35), particularly in atypical adenomas (5 of 17), in follicular carcinomas (6 of 19), with a high percentage for Hurthle cell carcinomas (6 of 11), and in papillary carcinomas (4 of 66). Point mutations for other ras genes in different codons studied were weak to absent. No mutation was found in undifferentiated carcinomas (n = 8). The predominant amino acid substitution both in the adenomas and in the differentiated tumours was glycine to valine (GGC to GTC) at position 12 of the Ha-ras gene. Our results obtained on a large series confirm the frequent occurrence of Ha-ras codon 12 gene mutations both in adenomas and in carcinomas. The frequency of ras mutations is linked to the geographical origin of the population studied and varies (0-85%) from one cancer type to another according to published data. Therefore, these mutations are merely an expression of cellular transformation.

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