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[Cancer Research 59, 4170-4174, September 1, 1999]
© 1999 American Association for Cancer Research

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[Cancer Research 59, 4170-4174, September 1, 1999]
© 1999 American Association for Cancer Research


Advances in Brief

Alterations of the PPP1R3 Gene in Human Cancer1

Takashi Kohno2, Satoshi Takakura2, Tatsuya Yamada, Aikou Okamoto, Tadao Tanaka and Jun Yokota3

Biology Division, National Cancer Center Research Institute, Tokyo 104-0045 [T. K., S. T., T. Y., J. Y.], and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo 105-8461 [S. T., A. O., T. T.], Japan

Recently, the PTEN/MMAC1 gene encoding a protein phosphatase (PP) and the PPP2R1B gene encoding a regulatory subunit of PP2A have been identified as being genetically altered in several types of human cancers, indicating that aberrations of intracellular signaling pathways via PPs are involved in human carcinogenesis. Here we report genetic alterations of the PPP1R3 gene located at chromosome 7q31, which encodes regulatory subunit 3 of PP1, in various types of human cancers. Mutations of the PPP1R3 gene were detected in 5 of 33 (15%) non-small cell lung cancer cell lines and 2 of 38 (5%) primary non-small cell lung cancers and were also observed in cell lines derived from a small cell lung cancer, an ovarian cancer, a colorectal cancer, and a gastric cancer. Mutations were widely dispersed in the coding region of the PPP1R3 gene. Three of the 11 detected mutations were nonsense mutations, whereas the remaining ones were missense mutations, most of which caused substitutions of evolutionarily conserved amino acids. These findings suggest that PPP1R3 alteration plays a role in the development of human cancers and that PPP1R3 could act as a tumor suppressor gene.




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Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
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Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
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Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 1999 by the American Association for Cancer Research.