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Three discrete regions of deletion at 3p in head and neck cancers.
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1993
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PathologyEpigeneticsTumor BiologyOncologyDiscrete RegionsNasopharyngeal CancerHuman HeadNeck OncologyMolecular DiagnosticsRadiation OncologyHead And Neck OncologyCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentChromosome 3Cell BiologyLung CancerTumor Suppressor GeneCancer GenomicsNeck PathologyHead And Neck CancerHead And Neck Squamous Cell CarcinomaTumor SuppressorMedicineNeck Cancers
Alteration of the short arm of chromosome 3 is one of the most consistent cytogenetic abnormalities found in human head and neck cancers. These alterations, composed of translocations and deletions, have been associated with the presence of a tumor suppressor gene(s), but no clear evidence of the location of this presumptive gene(s) was available. We performed a molecular analysis of the 3p region using a polymerase chain reaction-based approach. Twenty-eight of the 38 cases analyzed (74%) showed the presence of single or multiple areas of allelic loss. Three commonly deleted regions, tentatively mapped to 3p24-ter, 3p21.3, and 3p14--cen, were identified. Our results suggest that at least three oncosuppressor genes mapping on 3p may be involved in head and neck cancer development and support a common oncogenic pathway with squamous cell lung cancer, for which a similar pattern of 3p deletion has been described recently.