多发性内分泌肿瘤1型:遗传性内分泌肿瘤的临床和遗传学特征。

Recent progress in hormone research Pub Date : 1999-01-01
S J Marx, S K Agarwal, M B Kester, C Heppner, Y S Kim, M C Skarulis, L A James, P K Goldsmith, S K Saggar, S Y Park, A M Spiegel, A L Burns, L V Debelenko, Z Zhuang, I A Lubensky, L A Liotta, M R Emmert-Buck, S C Guru, P Manickam, J Crabtree, M R Erdos, F S Collins, S C Chandrasekharappa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

MEN1是甲状旁腺瘤、胃泌素瘤、泌乳素瘤等内分泌肿瘤的综合征。胶原瘤和面部血管纤维瘤是新发现但常见的皮肤表现。MEN1的许多肿瘤是良性的;然而,许多肠胰神经内分泌肿瘤和前肠类癌肿瘤是恶性的。因此,MEN1是一种癌症基因的表达,但对恶性肿瘤没有可用的预防或治疗方法。遗传性(与散发性相比)内分泌肿瘤表现出早发性和多样性,因为身体的每个细胞都受到遗传的“一次打击”。多发性肿瘤综合征伴内分泌肿瘤均包括非内分泌成分;他们已知的缺陷基因似乎主要是干扰细胞积累。一个内分泌组织的遗传性瘤变/增生反映了组织选择性和直接影响细胞分泌的缺陷。虽然遗传性内分泌肿瘤是罕见的,但其大多数已鉴定的基因也有助于常见的散发性内分泌肿瘤。遗传性肿瘤可能是由致癌基因(如RET)的激活引起的,或者更常见的是由肿瘤抑制基因(如P53、MEN1)的失活引起的。最近,MEN1被定位克隆鉴定。该策略包括缩小候选基因间隔,识别该间隔中的许多或全部基因,并检测新发现的候选基因在MEN1病例中的突变。MEN1在15例MEN1病例中有14例发生突变。美国国立卫生研究院检测显示,50例MEN1指数病例中有47例发生了种系MEN1突变,8例散发MEN1病例中有7例发生了种系MEN1突变。尽管已证实有能力发现种系MEN1突变,但NIH检测在5个分离性甲状旁腺功能亢进症家族中未发现MEN1突变,这表明这通常是由其他基因突变引起的。日本的类似研究发现,家族性分离垂体瘤也未表现出MEN1种系突变。现在可以考虑对MEN1及其表型病例以及已知MEN1突变的无症状家庭成员进行MEN1突变检测。生殖系MEN1检测在MEN2a和2b中不具有RET检测的紧迫性,因为MEN1检测通常不会导致重要的干预。散发性肿瘤中发现体细胞MEN1突变:甲状旁腺瘤(21%)、胃泌素瘤(33%)、胰岛素瘤(17%)和支气管类癌(36%)。其中,MEN1是已知最常发生突变的基因。MEN1具有广泛表达的mRNA,可编码610个氨基酸的蛋白(menin)。蛋白质序列不能提供结构域或功能的信息。该蛋白主要为核蛋白。Menin与AP-1转录因子JunD结合,抑制JunD的转录激活。大多数种系和体细胞MEN1突变预示着menin的截断,这可能是一种破坏性的变化。在种系和散发性肿瘤中失活MEN1突变支持了先前的预测,即MEN1是一种肿瘤抑制基因。种系MEN1突变是所有或大多数MEN1病例(家族性或散发性)的基础。体细胞MEN1突变是许多散发性内分泌肿瘤类型中最常见的基因突变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1: clinical and genetic features of the hereditary endocrine neoplasias.

MEN1 is a syndrome of parathyroid adenomas, gastrinomas, prolactinomas, and other endocrine tumors. Collagenomas and facial angiofibromas are newly recognized but common skin expressions. Many tumors in MEN1 are benign; however, many entero-pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors and foregut carcinoid tumors are malignant. MEN1 is thus the expression of a cancer gene but without available prevention or cure for malignancy. Hereditary (as compared to sporadic) endocrine tumors show early onset age and multiplicity, because each cell of the body has "one hit" by inheritance. Multiple neoplasia syndromes with endocrine tumor(s) all include nonendocrine components; their known defective genes seem mainly to disturb cell accumulation. Hereditary neoplasia/hyperplasia of one endocrine tissue reflects a defect that is tissue selective and directed at cell secretion. Though the hereditary endocrine neoplasias are rare, most of their identified genes also contribute to common sporadic endocrine neoplasms. Hereditary tumors may be caused by activation of an oncogene (e.g., RET) or, more often, by inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene (e.g., P53, MEN1). Recently, MEN1 was identified by positional cloning. This strategy included narrowing the gene candidate interval, identifying many or all genes in that interval, and testing the newly identified candidate genes for mutation in MEN1 cases. MEN1 was identified because it showed mutation in 14 of 15 MEN1 cases. NIH testing showed germline MEN1 mutations in 47 of 50 MEN1 index cases and in seven of eight cases with sporadic MEN1. Despite proven capacity to find germline MEN1 mutation, NIH testing found no MEN1 mutation among five families with isolated hyperparathyroidism, suggesting that this often arises from mutation of other gene(s). Analogous studies in Japan found that familial isolated pituitary tumors also did not show MEN1 germline mutation. MEN1 mutation testing can now be considered for cases of MEN1 and its phenocopies and for asymptomatic members of families with known MEN1 mutation. Germline MEN1 testing does not have the urgency of RET testing in MEN2a and 2b, as MEN1 testing does not commonly lead to an important intervention. Somatic MEN1 mutation was found in sporadic tumors: parathyroid adenoma (21%), gastrinoma (33%), insulinoma (17%), and bronchial carcinoid (36%). For each of these, MEN1 was the known gene most frequently mutated. MEN1 has a widely expressed mRNA that encodes a protein (menin) of 610 amino acids. The protein sequence is not informative about domains or functions. The protein was mainly nuclear. Menin binds to JunD, an AP-1 transcription factor, inhibiting JunD's activation of transcription. Most of the germline and somatic MEN1 mutations predict truncation of menin, a likely destructive change. Inactivating MEN1 mutations in germline and in sporadic neoplasms support prior predictions that MEN1 is a tumor suppressor gene. Germline MEN1 mutation underlies all or most cases of MEN1 (familial or sporadic). Somatic MEN1 mutation is the most common gene mutation in many sporadic endocrine tumor types.

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