Microsatellites are DNA stretches in the genome composed of repeats of short nucleotide sequences one to six nucleotides repeated n times. There are thousands of these in the genome and they are individually defined by their unique flanking regions and therefore amplifiable (by PCR) and so visualized. They are polymorphic (as number of repeats at an allele) and generally stably inherited, although shown to mutate in number of sequence repeats at an allele) and generally stably inherited, alth0ugh sown to mutate in number of sequence repeats at appreciable frequencies (0.01-0.0001). In certain types of tumors they have been shown to be highly unstable due to deficiencies in mismatch repair genes. Deficiencies at other loci may also enable such instability. Quantitative measures of specific microsatellite locus instability (MSI) have not been developed. We have developed a procedure, small pool PCR (SP-PCR) capable of carrying out that quantitation and coupled that with a high throughput fluorescent method to screen for MSI at frequencies at minisatellite loci. We will direct these techniques to families inheriting multiple cancer predisposition Li/Fraumeni Syndrome (LFS) and Wilms tumor syndrome (WT) and answer a series of questions. What is the level of instability in LFS tumors of different types and WT tumors? Is instability different in tumors with p53 mutation as opposed to tumors in families where p53 mutation have not been identified, and do those differences reflect different loci responsible for instability? The same question will be asked about WT tumors in families were the candidate gene is linked to 19q versus those where it is not. When is instability manifested in cultured fibroblasts from LFS patients as cells pass from pre-senescence to immortalization to tumor forming? Is instability detectable and quantitatively different in the """"""""normal"""""""" surrounding tissue and peripheral blood lymphocytes of patients inheriting the gene responsible for cancer versus their unaffected sibs? Can those differences be used for presymptomatic diagnosis in families where the mutation responsible for the disorder is not known?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA034936-16
Application #
6471751
Study Section
Project Start
2001-05-01
Project End
2002-04-30
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
001910777
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Peng, Gang; Bojadzieva, Jasmina; Ballinger, Mandy L et al. (2017) Estimating TP53 Mutation Carrier Probability in Families with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome Using LFSPRO. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 26:837-844
Maturu, Paramahamsa; Jones, Devin; Ruteshouser, E Cristy et al. (2017) Role of Cyclooxygenase-2 Pathway in Creating an Immunosuppressive Microenvironment and in Initiation and Progression of Wilms' Tumor. Neoplasia 19:237-249
Huang, Le; Mokkapati, Sharada; Hu, Qianghua et al. (2016) Nephron Progenitor But Not Stromal Progenitor Cells Give Rise to Wilms Tumors in Mouse Models with ?-Catenin Activation or Wt1 Ablation and Igf2 Upregulation. Neoplasia 18:71-81
Palculict, Timothy Blake; Ruteshouser, E Cristy; Fan, Yu et al. (2016) Identification of germline DICER1 mutations and loss of heterozygosity in familial Wilms tumour. J Med Genet 53:385-8
Liu, Changlu; Ma, Jianzhong; Amos, Christopher I (2015) Bayesian variable selection for hierarchical gene-environment and gene-gene interactions. Hum Genet 134:23-36
Mokkapati, Sharada; Niopek, Katharina; Huang, Le et al. (2014) ?-catenin activation in a novel liver progenitor cell type is sufficient to cause hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatoblastoma. Cancer Res 74:4515-25
Quintás-Cardama, Alfonso; Post, Sean M; Solis, Luisa M et al. (2014) Loss of the novel tumour suppressor and polarity gene Trim62 (Dear1) synergizes with oncogenic Ras in invasive lung cancer. J Pathol 234:108-19
Maturu, Paramahamsa; Overwijk, Willem W; Hicks, John et al. (2014) Characterization of the inflammatory microenvironment and identification of potential therapeutic targets in wilms tumors. Transl Oncol 7:484-92
Shahidul Makki, Mohammad; Cristy Ruteshouser, E; Huff, Vicki (2013) Ubiquitin specific protease 18 (Usp18) is a WT1 transcriptional target. Exp Cell Res 319:612-22
Kaftanovskaya, Elena M; Neukirchner, Giselle; Huff, Vicki et al. (2013) Left-sided cryptorchidism in mice with Wilms' tumour 1 gene deletion in gubernaculum testis. J Pathol 230:39-47

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