Publication | Closed Access
A Mutator Phenotype in Cancer 1
672
Citations
73
References
2001
Year
Unknown Venue
Tumor HeterogeneityMedicineOncogenic AgentPathologyMutator PhenotypeCancer GenomicsCancer BiologyGenetic StabilityCancer CellsCancer GeneticsSystems BiologyOncologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor MicroenvironmentTumor Biology
We have proposed that an early step in tumor progression is the expression of a mutator phenotype resulting from mutations in genes that normally function in the maintenance of genetic stability. There is new and strong experimental evidence that supports the concept of a mutator phenotype in cancer. As technologies for chromosomal visualization and DNA advance, there are increasing data that human cancer cells contain large numbers of mutations. First, I will review the concept of a mutator phenotype. Second, I will present the recent evidence that individual cancer cells contain thousands of mutations. Third, I will explore potential target genes that are required for maintenance of genetic stability in normal cells and ask if they are mutated in cancer cells. Fourth, I will address the timing of a mutator phenotype; is it an early event during tumor progression? Do tumors already contain cells that harbor mutations rendering them resistant to most chemotherapeutic agents? Lastly, I will speculate on the theoretical and practical implication of a mutator phenotype in cancer and consider the possibility of cancer prevention by delay, i.e., a reduction in mutation rates early during carcinogenesis might slow the progression of tumors.
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