BCOR involvement in cancer
- PMID: 31150281
- PMCID: PMC6595546
- DOI: 10.2217/epi-2018-0195
BCOR involvement in cancer
Abstract
BCOR is a gene that encodes for an epigenetic regulator involved in the specification of cell differentiation and body structure development and takes part in the noncanonical polycomb repressive complex 1. This review provides a comprehensive summary of BCOR's involvement in oncology, illustrating that various BCOR aberrations, such as the internal tandem duplications of the PCGF Ub-like fold discriminator domain and different gene fusions (mainly BCOR-CCNB3, BCOR-MAML3 and ZC3H7B-BCOR), represent driver elements of various sarcomas such as clear cell sarcoma of the kidney, primitive mesenchymal myxoid tumor of infancy, small round blue cell sarcoma, endometrial stromal sarcoma and histologically heterogeneous CNS neoplasms group with similar genomic methylation patterns known as CNS-HGNET-BCOR. Furthermore, other BCOR alterations (often loss of function mutations) recur in a large variety of mesenchymal, epithelial, neural and hematological tumors, suggesting a central role in cancer evolution.
Keywords: BCOR; CCSK; CNS-HGNET-BCOR; ESS; ITD; PRC1.1; PRC2; SRBCS; epigenetics; oncogenesis.
Conflict of interest statement
This work was supported by fund donation in memory of Maestro Claudio Abbado and by Associazione Margherita Onlus. The authors have no other relevant affiliation or financial involvement with an organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript.
Funded writing assistance was utilized in the production of this article from Enago. No other writing assistance was utilized.
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