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Neurofibromatosis type 2
and von Hippel-Lindau disease: from gene cloning to function
Kley N, Whaley J,
Seizinger BR
Department of Molecular Genetics, Oncology, Bristol-Myers
Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-4000, USA
Most of the genes for hereditary tumor syndromes cloned thus far have
subsequently been shown to be mutated not only in the germlines and tumors from
patients with the relatively rare inherited disease, but also in the much more
common sporadic tumor counterparts in the general population.
Thus, the
isolation and functional characterization of genes associated with hereditary
tumor syndromes have emerged as a major strategy to gain insights into some of
the most fundamental mechanisms of tumorigenesis.
The search for the genes
causing two hereditary tumor syndromes of the nervous system, neurofibromatosis
type 2 (NF2) and von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL), has recently culminated in the
cloning of both disease genes.
This represents another successful application of
the so-called positional cloning approach, i.e., the isolation of a hereditary
disease gene with unknown function, based on the determination of its
chromosomal location in the human genome.
The gene for NF2, a syndrome typically
associated with vestibular schwannomas and meningiomas, is homologous with a
family of genes whose members appear to play an important role in bridging the
cell membrane with the intracellular cytoskeleton, including moesin, ezrin,
radixin, and protein 4.1.
Recent mutation analyses have revealed that the NF2
tumor suppressor gene is frequently mutated not only in vestibular schwannomas
and meningiomas from NF2 patients, but also in their sporadic counterparts,
which represent approximately one-third of all human brain tumors.
Furthermore,
malignant human tumors seemingly unrelated to the NF2 syndrome, such as neural
crest-derived malignant melanomas, as well as malignant mesotheliomas (a pleural
mesoderm-derived tumor), have also been found to be frequently mutated or
deleted in the NF2 locus, suggesting a broader role for the NF2 gene in the
initiation and progression of human neoplasms.
VHL is a rare tumor syndrome
characterized by certain types of nervous system tumors (cerebellar and spinal
hemangioblastomas as well as retinal angiomas), in conjunction with bilateral
renal cell carcinomas and pheochromocytomas.
Similar to NF2, recent genetic
mutation studies have revealed that the VHL tumor suppressor gene is not only
mutated in the hereditary tumors from VHL patients, but also in their sporadic
counterparts.
Importantly, the VHL gene represents the most frequently mutated
cancer-related gene thus far identified in sporadic renal cell carcinoma.
In
contrast to most other hereditary cancer syndromes, however, VHL mutations are
surprisingly specific for tumors typically associated with the VHL syndrome, and
have not been detected in any other tumor type unrelated to VHL.
The cloning and
initial genetic characterization of the NF2 and VHL genes have now provided a
rational basis for subsequent functional studies on the elucidation of the
normal and tumor-associated cellular signaling pathways of these tumor
suppressor genes.
PMID:
8586465 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=8586465
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