A hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma case associated with hypermethylation of the MLH1 gene in normal tissue and loss of heterozygosity of the unmethylated allele in the resulting microsatellite instability-high tumor.

TitleA hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma case associated with hypermethylation of the MLH1 gene in normal tissue and loss of heterozygosity of the unmethylated allele in the resulting microsatellite instability-high tumor.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsGazzoli I, Loda M, Garber J, Syngal S, Kolodner RD
JournalCancer Res
Volume62
Issue14
Pagination3925-8
Date Published2002 Jul 15
ISSN0008-5472
KeywordsAdaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing, Alleles, Carrier Proteins, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis, CpG Islands, DNA Methylation, DNA, Neoplasm, Humans, Loss of Heterozygosity, Microsatellite Repeats, MutL Protein Homolog 1, Neoplasm Proteins, Nuclear Proteins, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Promoter Regions, Genetic
Abstract

Fourteen suspected hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma cases with microsatellite unstable(microsatellite instability-high; MSI-H) tumors but no germ-line MSH2, MSH6, or MLH1 mutations were examined for hypermethylation of CpG sites in the critical promoter region of MLH1. The methylation patterns were determined using methylation-specific PCR and by sequence analysis of sodium bisulfite-treated genomic DNA. In one case, DNA hypermethylation of one allele was detected in DNA isolated from blood. In the MSI-H tumor from this case, the unmethylated MLH1 allele was eliminated by loss of heterozygosity, and the methylated allele was retained. This biallelic inactivation resulted in loss of expression of MLH1 in the tumor as confirmed by immunohistochemistry. These results suggest a novel mode of germ-line inactivation of a cancer susceptibility gene.

Alternate JournalCancer Res
PubMed ID12124320
Grant ListCA06516 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
CA23100 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
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