Functional inactivation of the WTX gene is not a frequent event in Wilms' tumors.

Oncogene

Department of Experimental Oncology and Laboratories, Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milano, Italy.

Published: July 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the role of the WTX gene in Wilms' tumors, revealing that mutations or losses of this gene occur in about one-third of cases.
  • Out of 102 analyzed tumors, only a small percentage (approximately 7%) showed a complete loss of function of the WTX gene, indicating that its contribution to Wilms' tumors may be less significant than earlier estimates.
  • The findings suggest that previous assumptions about the genetic causes of Wilms' tumors should be reassessed, particularly regarding the frequency of WTX gene alterations.

Article Abstract

For many years the precise genetic etiology of the majority of Wilms' tumors has remained unexplained. Recently, the WTX gene, mapped to chromosome Xq11.1, has been reported to be lost or mutated in approximately one-third of Wilms' tumors. Moreover, in female cases, the somatically inactivated alleles were found to invariantly derive from the active chromosome X. Consequently, WTX has been proposed as a 'one-hit' tumor suppressor gene. To provide further insights on the contribution of WTX to the development of the disease, we have examined 102 Wilms' tumors, obtained from 43 male and 57 female patients. Quantitative PCR analyses detected WTX deletions in 5 of 45 (11%) tumors from males, whereas loss of heterozygosity at WTX-linked microsatellites was observed in 9 tumors from 50 informative females (19%). However, in the latter group, using a combination of HUMARA assay and bisulfite-modified DNA sequencing, we found that the deletion affected the active chromosome X only in two cases (4%). Sequence analyses detected an inactivating somatic mutation of WTX in a single tumor, in which a strongly reduced expression of the mutant allele respect to the wild-type allele was observed, a finding not consistent with its localization on the active chromosome X. Overall, a functional somatic nullizygosity of the WTX gene was ascertained only in seven of the Wilms' tumors included in the study (approximately 7%). Our findings indicate that previously reported estimates on the proportion of Wilms' tumors due to WTX alterations should be reconsidered.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2008.93DOI Listing

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