Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
February 2017
Background: The transcription factor high-mobility AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) is involved in stem cell renewal and is expressed in many tumor tissues. Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) comprise tumors of the upper aerodigestive tract and are characterized by high recurrence rates that represent a challenge to patient management. The study addresses the potential of HMGA2 as a molecular biomarker for HNSCC patient survival.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aim: Compared to leiomyomas, smooth muscle tumors of uncertain malignant potential (STUMP), and leiomyosarcomas (LMS) originating from the Muellerian duct are very rare. Their molecular pathogenesis remains poorly understood. The present article aims at performing genetic analyses of these tumors that may help assist histopathological examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutations of mediator subcomplex 12 (MED12) and of high mobility group protein AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) are driver mutations in uterine leiomyomas (UL) that have not been observed to coexist in one tumor and even rarely coexist in different UL tumors of one patient. Here we describe a patient who underwent hysterectomy because of multiple leiomyomas which were studied by cytogenetics, MED12 hotspot sequencing, and copy number variation arrays. Two of the UL tumors had different HMGA2 rearrangements not detected by G-banding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recent findings on genetic changes in uterine leiomyomas suggest these benign tumors being a heterogeneous group of diseases in terms of molecular pathogenesis with those showing karyotype alterations as well as those characterized only by cytogenetically invisible mutations of mediator subcomplex 12 (MED12). Herein, five uterine leiomyomas (UL) with an apparently normal karyotype that lacked MED12-mutations were investigated by copy number variation arrays along with their matching myometrium to search for small genomic imbalances.
Results: Of five tumors one showed chromothripsis-like phenomena with numerous gains and losses of small segments mainly clustered to five chromosomal regions i.
Uterine fibroids are the most common gynecological tumors affecting women in their reproductive age. Despite this high incidence the pathogenesis of fibroids is widely unsolved. Whereas formerly only imbalances in hormonal levels were considered to account for tumor development, the identification of genetic changes likely to affect myometrial stem cell reservoirs provided a novel approach to fibroid genesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Epitheloid leiomyoma is a rare subtype of benign smooth muscle tumors.
Results: Herein, we present the results of classical cytogenetics, MED12 mutation analysis, and copy number variation array evaluation in one such case. Whereas cytogenetic did not show evidence for clonal chromosome abnormalities and no MED12 mutation in the "fibroid hot spot" region was detected, array hybridization revealed multiple abnormalities.
In pleomorphic adenomas of the salivary glands (PASG) recurrent chromosomal rearrangements affecting either 8q12 or 12q14∼15 lead to an overexpression of the genes of the genuine transcription factor PLAG1 or the architectural transcription factor HMGA2, respectively. Both genes are also affected by recurrent chromosomal rearrangements in benign adipocytic tumors as e. g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUterine leiomyomas (UL) are the most frequent symptomatic human tumors. Nevertheless, their molecular pathogenesis is not yet fully understood. To learn more about the biology of these common neoplasms and their response to treatment, cell cultures derived from UL are a frequently used model system, but until recently appropriate genetic markers confirming their origin from the tumor cell population were lacking for most UL, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is a clear link between overweight, gain of white adipose tissue, and diabetes type 2 (T2D). The molecular mechanism of the gain of adipose tissue is linked with the expression of high mobility group protein AT-hook 2 (HMGA2), and recent studies revealed an association with a SNP near HMGA2. In this study, we investigated the gene expression of HMGA2, p14 (Arf) , CDKN1A, and BAX in human abdominal subcutaneous white adipose tissue from 157 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes Chromosomes Cancer
March 2013
Mutations of the mediator subcomplex 12 gene (MED12) recently have been described in a large group of uterine leiomyomas (UL) but only in a single malignant uterine smooth muscle tumor. To further address the occurrence of fibroid-type MED12 mutations in smooth muscle tumors, we have analyzed samples from 34 leiomyosarcomas (LMS), 21 UL, two extrauterine leiomyomas (EL), and 10 canine genital leiomyomas for the presence of MED12 mutations of the UL-type. Interestingly, besides UL MED12 mutations were found in one uterine LMS, one EL, and two canine vaginal leiomyomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The expression of high mobility group protein AT-hook2 (HMGA2) indicates a worse prognosis in many epithelial malignancies, such as colon cancer. The present study addresses methodological aspects, as well as the genetic background, of the HMGA2 expression in colon cancer.
Materials And Methods: Samples of 38 colon carcinomas were studied for the expression of HMGA2 by quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR).
Recurrent chromosomal alterations are found in roughly 20% of all uterine fibroids but in the majority cytogenetic changes are lacking. Recently, mutations of the gene mediator subcomplex 12 (MED12) have been detected in a majority of fibroids but no information is available whether or not they co-occur with cytogenetic subtypes as, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMP4 has been linked to early steps of adipocyte lineage differentiation but only little is known about its corresponding downstream pathways. Herein, we have investigated whether or not the expression of high mobility group protein HMGA2, another protein linked to proliferation and differentiation within the process of adipogenesis, may be influenced by BMP4 signaling in adipose tissue derived stem cells. Compared to FGF1, a strong inducer of HMGA2 in immortalized pre-adipocytes, BMP4 was found moderately to induce the HMGA2 mRNA expression in serum starved adipose tissue derived stem cells and myometrial cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To address the influence of genes involved in stem cell self-renewal and senescence on the growth of leiomyoma cells in vitro and to explore possible therapeutic implications of a targeted disruption of the p53-murine double minute 2 (MDM2) interaction.
Materials And Methods: Gene expression studies (qRT-PCR) of fibroid tissue and cells; β-galactosidase stain and qRT-PCR after antagonizing MDM2.
Results: In fibroid cells, expression of HMGA2 decreased with passaging while that of p14(Arf) increased.
HMGA2 is a major regulator of benign tumorigenesis from mesenchyme-derived tissues and stem-cell self-renewal. It has been postulated that HMGA2 mediates its critical function by decreasing p16(Ink4a)/p14(Arf) expression and cellular senescence. To repress the oncogenic activity of HMGA2, the lin-28-let-7 axis is thought to increasingly repress the expression of HMGA2 with age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn human fibroids genes encoding the high-mobility proteins containing the 'AT-hook' DNA-binding motif (HMGA) are frequently affected by non-random chromosomal rearrangements. Thus, the different proteins and their derivatives resulting from these genomic rearrangements can be assumed to be involved in the genesis of these tumors by activation of largely identical downstream pathways. Constructs encoding HMGA proteins and their relevant derivatives were overexpressed in human myometrial cells, and RNA isolated from these cells was hybridized to filter arrays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Genet Cytogenet
October 2010
The in vitro growth of cells from uterine fibroids is characterized by an early onset of senescence. Often, an even lower growth potential than that of matching myometrial cells is noted. Also, the tremendous differences in the expression of the high mobility group protein HMGA2 seen when comparing fibroids of different genetic subtypes are surprisingly not reflected by significant differences in their growth potential in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathogenetically, uterine leiomyomas (ULs) can be interpreted as the result of a monoclonal abnormal proliferation of myometrial cells. Oncogene-induced senescence (OIS) is a frequent phenomenon in premalignant lesions that leads to a growth arrest mainly by the activation of two potent growth-inhibitory pathways as represented by p16(Ink4a) and p19(Arf). The relevance of OIS for the development of UL has not been addressed, but HMGA2, encoded by a major target gene of recurrent chromosomal abnormalities in UL, has been implicated in the repression of the Ink4a/Arf (CDKN2A) locus.
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