Preferential amplification of the paternal allele of the N-myc gene in human neuroblastomas
- PMID: 8102299
- DOI: 10.1038/ng0693-191
Preferential amplification of the paternal allele of the N-myc gene in human neuroblastomas
Abstract
Genomic imprinting plays a role in influencing the parental origin of genes involved in cancer-specific rearrangements. We have analysed 22 neuroblastomas with N-myc amplification to determine the parental origin of the amplified N-myc allele and the allele that is deleted from chromosome 1p. We analysed DNA from neuroblastoma patients and their parents, using four polymorphisms for 1p and three for the N-myc amplicon. We determined that the paternal allele of N-myc was preferentially amplified (12 out of 13 cases; P = 0.002). However, the paternal allele was lost from 1p in six out of ten cases, consistent with a random distribution (P > 0.2). These results suggest that parental imprinting influences which N-myc allele is amplified in neuroblastomas, but it does not appear to affect the 1p allele that is deleted in the cases that we have examined.
Comment in
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Allelic loss of chromosome 1p36 in neuroblastoma is of preferential maternal origin and correlates with N-myc amplification.Nat Genet. 1993 Jun;4(2):187-90. doi: 10.1038/ng0693-187. Nat Genet. 1993. PMID: 8102298
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Genomic imprinting and gene activation in cancer.Nat Genet. 1993 Jun;4(2):110-3. doi: 10.1038/ng0693-110. Nat Genet. 1993. PMID: 8348145 No abstract available.
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