A substantial proportion of microsatellite-unstable colon tumors carry TP53 mutations while not showing chromosomal instability

JL Westra, LG Boven, P van der Wes, Hendrika Faber, B Sikkema, M Schaapveld, T Dijkhuizen, H Hollema, CHCM Buys, JTM Plukker, K Kok, RMW Hofstra*

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

    OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

    8 Citaten (Scopus)

    Samenvatting

    Chromosomal instability in colon tumors implies the presence of numerical and structural chromosome aberrations and is further characterized by the absence of microsatellite instability and the occurrence of KRAS and/or TP53 mutations. In a previous screening of 194 colon tumors for both microsatellite instability and TP53 mutation, we found 25 microsatellite-unstable tumors, in 9 (36%) of which, presumed to be chromosomally stable, there were TP53 mutations. This prompted us to investigate whether a TP53 mutation in these microsatellite-unstable tumors would be an indicator of chromosomal instability, that is, whether this would be a category of tumors showing both microsatellite and chromosomal instability. For chromosomal instability assessment, we performed array-comparative genomic hybridization analysis of tumor and control DNA extracted from formalin-fixed, paraffin-em bedded stage III colon tumor specimens. The array consisted of 435 subtelomere-specific BACs. We compared all but one (whose DNA was of bad quality) of the microsatellite-unstable TP53 mutation-containing tumors (8) with a similarly sized group of microsatellite-unstable tumors without TP53 mutation (11). Microsatellite-unstable tumors with a TP53 mutation showed on average 0.9 aberrations (range 0-3) when assessed with this array system. Those without a TP53 mutation showed on average 0.7 aberrations (range 0-2). Thus, microsatellite-unstable tumors showed few chromosomal abnormalities regardless of TP53 mutation status. Because, in our study, the microsatellite-stable tumors had on average 3.4 chromosomal abnormalities (range 0-7), a clear difference exists between microsatellite-unstable and -stable tumors. Because a substantial proportion of microsatellite-unstable colon tumors carry a TP53 mutation while showing relatively few chromosomal aberrations, a TP53 mutation in these tumors cannot be considered to be an indicator of chromosomal instability. (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

    Originele taal-2English
    Pagina's (van-tot)194-201
    Aantal pagina's8
    TijdschriftGenes Chromosomes & Cancer
    Volume43
    Nummer van het tijdschrift2
    DOI's
    StatusPublished - jun.-2005

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