Telomerase activity is commonly detected in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancers

被引:0
|
作者
Li, ZH
Salovaara, R
Aaltonen, LA
Shibata, D
机构
[1] UNIV SO CALIF,SCH MED,DEPT PATHOL,LOS ANGELES,CA 90033
[2] HELSINKI UNIV,DEPT PATHOL,HELSINKI,FINLAND
[3] HELSINKI UNIV,DEPT MED GENET,HELSINKI,FINLAND
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY | 1996年 / 148卷 / 04期
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D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Telomerase activity can be detected in most human cancers. These findings are consistent with the telomere hypothesis, which predicts telomerase expression after a number of mitotic divisions to prevent the progressive and catastrophic loss of telomeres. However, telomerase is not detected in a minority of colorectal cancers suggesting either alternative mechanisms of immortalization or that their telomeres have not yet shortened sufficiently to require telomerase activity. Colorectal cancers arising in patients with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) were examined for telomerase activity because compared to sporadic tumors, HNPCC tumors are less likely to pass a telomere threshold as they occur in younger patients and exhibit ''accelerated'' progression, perhaps because of their characteristic mutator phenotypes and losses of mismatch repair. Primary colorectal cancers, 13 in HNPCC patients, and 37 sporadic tumors (17 With mutator phenotypes) were examined for telomerase activity by the TRAP (telomeric repent amplification protocol) assay, The majority of colorectal cancers contained detectable telomerase activity regardless of underlying phenotype (77% of HNPCC; 81% of sporadic tumors, 88% with mutator phenotypes and 75% without mutator phenotypes). Therefore, telomerase expression appears to be commonly acquired in the progression of both mutator phenotype and sporadic colorectal cancers.
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页码:1075 / 1079
页数:5
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