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Mutations in BRAF and KRAS Characterize the Development of Low-Grade Ovarian Serous Carcinoma
848
Citations
19
References
2003
Year
Kras MutationsBraf Codon 599Tumoral PathologyCancer PathologySomatic VariantTumor HeterogeneityMedicineGynecologyPathologyDownstream MediatorsKras CharacterizeCancer GeneticsOncologyCell BiologyTumor BiologyCarcinomaOvarian Cancer
Activating mutations in KRAS and BRAF are found in many human cancers. The study examined whether mutations at BRAF codon 599 and KRAS codons 12/13 are present in ovarian carcinoma by analyzing these genes in low‑grade serous tumors and their precursors. Mutations in BRAF codon 599 or KRAS codons 12/13 were present in 68 % of invasive micropapillary serous carcinomas and 61 % of serous borderline tumors, but were absent in all 72 high‑grade serous carcinomas, indicating that low‑grade and high‑grade serous ovarian carcinomas arise via distinct pathways.
Activating mutations in KRAS and in one of its downstream mediators, BRAF, have been identified in a variety of human cancers. To determine the role of mutations in BRAF and KRAS in ovarian carcinoma, we analyzed both genes for three common mutations (at codon 599 of BRAF and codons 12 and 13 of KRAS). Mutations in either codon 599 of BRAF or codons 12 and 13 of KRAS occurred in 15 of 22 (68%) invasive micropapillary serous carcinomas (MPSCs; low-grade tumors) and in 31 of 51 (61%) serous borderline tumors (precursor lesions to invasive MPSCs). None of the tumors contained a mutation in both BRAF and KRAS. In contrast, none of the 72 conventional aggressive high-grade serous carcinomas analyzed contained the BRAF codon 599 mutation or either of the two KRAS mutations. The apparent restriction of these BRAF and KRAS mutations to low-grade serous ovarian carcinoma and its precursors suggests that low-grade and high-grade ovarian serous carcinomas develop through independent pathways.
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