A cell cycle regulator potentially involved in genesis of many tumor types
- PMID: 8153634
- DOI: 10.1126/science.8153634
A cell cycle regulator potentially involved in genesis of many tumor types
Abstract
A putative tumor suppressor locus on the short arm of human chromosome 9 has been localized to a region of less than 40 kilobases by means of homozygous deletions in melanoma cell lines. This region contained a gene, Multiple Tumor Suppressor 1 (MTS1), that encodes a previously identified inhibitor (p16) of cyclin-dependent kinase 4. MTS1 was homozygously deleted at high frequency in cell lines derived from tumors of lung, breast, brain, bone, skin, bladder, kidney, ovary, and lymphocyte. Melanoma cell lines that carried at least one copy of MTS1 frequently carried nonsense, missense, or frameshift mutations in the gene. These findings suggest that MTS1 mutations are involved in tumor formation in a wide range of tissues.
Comment in
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Sunlight and melanoma: an answer from MTS1 (p16).Science. 1995 Jan 6;267(5194):15-6. doi: 10.1126/science.7809600. Science. 1995. PMID: 7809600 No abstract available.
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Rates of p16 (MTS1) mutations in primary tumors with 9p loss.Science. 1994 Jul 15;265(5170):415-7. doi: 10.1126/science.8023167. Science. 1994. PMID: 8023167 No abstract available.
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New tumor suppressor may rival p53.Science. 1994 Apr 15;264(5157):344-5. doi: 10.1126/science.8153613. Science. 1994. PMID: 8153613 No abstract available.
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