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Identification and characterization of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 ( MEN1 ) gene
Author(s) -
Navjot Guru,
Manickam,
Crabtree,
Olufemi,
Vikas Agarwal,
Debelenko,
Zhuang zhuang,
Lubensky,
Kester,
Ki Wook Kim,
Heppner,
Weisemann,
Boguski,
Hong Wang,
Burns,
Liotta,
Spiegel,
EmmertBuck,
Steffen Marx,
' Collins,
Chandrasekharappa
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.625
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1365-2796
pISSN - 0954-6820
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2796.1998.00346.x
Subject(s) - men1 , contig , multiple endocrine neoplasia , loss of heterozygosity , locus (genetics) , positional cloning , genetics , biology , gene , allele , genome
Guru SC, Manickam, Crabtree JS, Olufemi S‐E, Agarwal SK, Debelenko LV, Zhuang Z, Lubensky IA, Kester MB, Kim YS, Heppner C, Weisemann JM, Boguski MS, Wang Y, Roe BA, Burns AL, Liotta LA, Speigel AM, Emmert‐Buck MR, Marx SJ, Collins FS, Chandrasekharappa SC (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda; University of Oklahoma, Norman; USA). Identification and characterization of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 ( MEN1 ) gene (Minisymposium: MEN & VHL). J Intern Med 1998; 243 : 433–9. For nearly a decade since the mapping of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 ( MEN1 ) locus to 11q13 and the suggestion that it is a tumour suppressor gene, efforts have been made to identify the gene responsible for this familial cancer syndrome. Recently, we have identified the MEN1 gene by the positional cloning approach. This effort involved construction of a 2.8‐Mb physical map (D11S480–D11S913) based primarily on a bacterial clone contig. Using these resources, 20 new polymorphic markers were isolated which helped to reduce the interval for candidate genes by haplotype analysis in families and by loss of heterozygosity (LOH) studies in approximately 200 tumours, utilizing laser‐assisted microdissection to obtain tumour cells with minimal or no admixture by normal cells. The interval was narrowed by LOH to only 300 kb, and nearly 20 new transcripts that map to this region of 11q13 were isolated and characterized. One of the transcripts was found by dideoxyfingerprinting and cycle sequencing to harbour deleterious germline mutations in affected individuals from MEN‐1 kindreds and therefore identified as the MEN1 gene. The type of germline mutations and the identification of mutations in sporadic tumours support the Knudson's two‐hit model of tumorigenesis for MEN‐1. Efforts are being made to identify the function of the MEN1 gene‐encoded protein, menin, and to study its role in tumorigenesis.

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