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Advances in Brief

Somatic Deletions and Mutations in the Cowden Disease Gene, PTEN, in Sporadic Thyroid Tumors

Patricia L. M. Dahia, Debbie J. Marsh, Zimu Zheng, Jan Zedenius, Paul Komminoth, Tony Frisk, Goran Wallin, Ramon Parsons, Michel Longy, Catharina Larsson and Charis Eng
Patricia L. M. Dahia
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Debbie J. Marsh
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Zimu Zheng
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Jan Zedenius
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Paul Komminoth
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Tony Frisk
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Goran Wallin
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Ramon Parsons
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Michel Longy
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Catharina Larsson
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Charis Eng
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DOI:  Published November 1997
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Abstract

The majority of familial medullary thyroid neoplasms are associated with germ-line mutations of the RET proto-oncogene, yet very little is known about the mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of familial and sporadic nonmedullary thyroid tumors. A subset of thyroid tumors have loss of heterozygosity of chromosome 10q22–23, a region harboring the gene responsible for Cowden disease, an autosomal dominant hamartoma syndrome associated with thyroid and breast tumors. PTEN/MMAC1/TEP1 codes for a dual-specificity phosphatase and is likely a tumor suppressor gene. We sought to determine the PTEN status in a series of epithelial thyroid neoplasms. We studied 95 sporadic thyroid tumors, of which 39 were papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTCs), 12 were follicular carcinomas, 9 were anaplastic carcinomas, 5 were Hürthle cell carcinomas, 21 were nonfunctioning follicular adenomas, and 9 were Hürthle cell adenomas. Direct sequencing of PCR-amplified products was performed for all nine exons of PTEN. Two polymorphic markers, one located in intron 8 and another, a dinucleotide repeat marker, AFMa086wg9, located within intron 2, were analyzed in paired blood-tumor DNA samples to assess hemizygous deletions of PTEN. We found a somatic frameshift mutation in one PTC, which was expected to generate a premature stop codon 2 amino acids downstream. Twenty-six % of informative benign tumors (four follicular adenomas and three Hürthle cell adenomas) and only 3 of 49 (6.1%) informative malignant tumors (one PTC, one follicular carcinoma, and one anaplastic carcinoma) showed evidence of hemizygous deletion of PTEN (P = 0.046). We conclude that a subset of thyroid tumors have somatic deletions of the PTEN gene, predominantly the benign forms, and that small intragenic mutations of PTEN are infrequent in thyroid tumors. We speculate that other mechanisms of PTEN inactivation, rather than small intragenic mutations, might occur in the hemizygously deleted samples and act as the “Knudson second hit.” Alternatively, other tumor suppressor genes mapping to chromosome 10q22–23 could be the actual targets for such deletions and thus represent the various hits in the pathway of multistep carcinogenesis.

Footnotes

  • ↵1 This work was supported by the American Cancer Society Grant RPG-97-064-01-VM, a Young Scientist Award from the Markey Charitable Trust, the Barr Investigatorship, and the Lawrence and Susan Marx Investigatorship (to C. E.).

  • ↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney Street, Boston, MA 02115-6084. Phone: (617) 632-5632; Fax: (617) 532-4280; E-mail: charis_eng@macmailgw.dfci.harvard.edu.

  • Received August 7, 1997.
  • Accepted September 15, 1997.
  • ©1997 American Association for Cancer Research.
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November 1997
Volume 57, Issue 21
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Somatic Deletions and Mutations in the Cowden Disease Gene, PTEN, in Sporadic Thyroid Tumors
Patricia L. M. Dahia, Debbie J. Marsh, Zimu Zheng, Jan Zedenius, Paul Komminoth, Tony Frisk, Goran Wallin, Ramon Parsons, Michel Longy, Catharina Larsson and Charis Eng
Cancer Res November 1 1997 (57) (21) 4710-4713;

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Somatic Deletions and Mutations in the Cowden Disease Gene, PTEN, in Sporadic Thyroid Tumors
Patricia L. M. Dahia, Debbie J. Marsh, Zimu Zheng, Jan Zedenius, Paul Komminoth, Tony Frisk, Goran Wallin, Ramon Parsons, Michel Longy, Catharina Larsson and Charis Eng
Cancer Res November 1 1997 (57) (21) 4710-4713;
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