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Functionally inactivating point mutation in the tumor-suppressorIRF-1 gene identified in human gastric cancer
85
Citations
14
References
1998
Year
Tumor-suppressorirf-1 GeneGeneticsPathologyHuman Gastric CancerCancer BiologyTumor BiologyResidual AlleleHuman Gastric CancersOncologyConcerned LocusRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentPoint MutationCancer GeneticsGene ExpressionCell BiologyCancer GenomicsTumor SuppressorMedicine
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) observed in human tumors strongly suggests the existence of (a) tumor-suppressor gene(s) at the concerned locus. A series of studies has revealed that LOH on the long arm of chromosome 5 (5q) frequently occurs in differentiated gastric adenocarcinomas. Furthermore, it has been shown that the interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1) locus on chromosome 5q31.1 is one of the common minimal regions of LOH in these cancers. IRF-1 is a transcriptional activator that shows tumor-suppressor activity in the mouse. In the present study, we examined the sequence of the IRF-1 gene in 9 cases of histologically differentiated gastric adenocarcinomas, all of which exhibited LOH at the IRF-1 locus. We identified a mis-sense mutation in the residual allele in one case. This mutated form of IRF-1 showed markedly reduced transcriptional activity. In addition, overexpression of wild-type IRF-1 induced cell-cycle arrest, whereas such activity was attenuated in the mutant IRF-1. These results suggest that the loss of functional IRF-1 is critical for the development of human gastric cancers.
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