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Involvement of IGF 2 and H 19 imprinting in choriocarcinoma development
Author(s) -
Wake Norio,
Arima Takahiro,
Matsuda Takao
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
international journal of gynecology and obstetrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.895
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1879-3479
pISSN - 0020-7292
DOI - 10.1016/s0020-7292(96)02403-4
Subject(s) - biology , genomic imprinting , choriocarcinoma , conceptus , genetics , sperm , gene , pregnancy , fetus , dna methylation , gene expression
Abstract Complete hydatidiform mole is an abnormal pregnancy characterized by grossly swollen villi in the absence of a fetus (Kajii and Ohama 1997, Wake et al., 1978, Jacobs et al., 1980). It is well known that this abnormal pregnancy product is androgenetic in origin. The entire genome of the molar conceptus is paternally derived. The majority of moles result from fertilization of an empty egg by haploid sperm. The paternally derived haploid set then duplicated without cytokinesis and restores diploidy. Invariably, this class of moles has a 46, XX karyotype and is completely homozygous for genetic markers. Fertilization of an empty egg by two sperms is responsible for the remaining case. These moles show a mixture of homozygous and heterozygous patterns of paternally derived genetic markers. Although complete mole is usually a benign process, 10 to 20 percent of cases leads to either invasive mole or choriocarcinoma. This propensity to malignancy has to associate with the genetic features shown in the mole, that imply the formation of homozygosity and the selective inheritance of paternal genome. It has been described in various human malignancies that both genetic features associate with the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes. Homozygosity would lead to the inactivation of tumor suppressor gene in the mole by a signal event occurred on sperm DNAs. In turn, paternal transmission would result in the silencing of particular tumor suppressor genes. Thus, tumor suppressor genes inactivated either by homozygosity formation or by paternal transmission would be involved in the pathogenesis of choriocarcinoma. Both the maternal and paternal genomes are necessary for normal embryonic development in mammals. Parental‐origin‐specific functional differences between two alleles, known as genomic imprinting, seem to be exploited for a regulatory mechanism crucial for the proper development of both embryonic and extraembryonic tissues. The list of imprinted genes identified is growing rapidly lately in mouse and man (DeChiara TM et al., 1991, Barlow et al., 1991, Bartolomei MS et al., 1991, Leff SE et al., 1992, Hatada I et al., 1993, Giddings SJ et al., 1994, Hayashizaki Y et al., 1994, Villar AJ et al., 1994, Guillemot F et al., 1995). Among these, IGF 2 and H 19 tightly linked on human chromosome 11 are of special interest because of their reciprocal imprinting and possible association with certain malignancy and congenital abnormalies. The IGF 2 gene expressed from the paternally derived allele (Ohlsson et al., 1993, Giannoukalis et al., 1993), whereas the H 19 gene is expressed from the maternally derived allele (Rachmilewitz et al., 1992, Zhang et al 1993, Ferguson‐Smith et al., 1993).