Volume 21, Issue 3 370908 pp. 121-126
Article
Open Access

MUC Gene Abnormalities in Sporadic and Hereditary Mucinous Colon Cancers with Microsatellite Instability

Chiara Pastrello

Chiara Pastrello

Department of Preclinical Research and Epidemiology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Manuela Santarosa

Manuela Santarosa

Department of Preclinical Research and Epidemiology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Mara Fornasarig

Mara Fornasarig

Department of Medical Oncology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Roberto Sigon

Roberto Sigon

Department of Surgical Oncology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Tiziana Perin

Tiziana Perin

Department of Diagnostics Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Giuseppe Giannini

Giuseppe Giannini

Department of Experimental Medicine and Pathology University La Sapienza Rome, Italy

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Mauro Boiocchi

Mauro Boiocchi

Department of Preclinical Research and Epidemiology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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Alessandra Viel

Corresponding Author

Alessandra Viel

Department of Preclinical Research and Epidemiology Centro Riferimento Oncologico IRCCS Aviano (PN), Italy

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First published: 09 June 2013
Citations: 8

Abstract

Aim of this study was verifying whether mucin producing colon cancers (CRCs) could develop through a molecular pathway involving microsatellite instability (MSI) and MUC gene alterations. Out of 49 CRCs expressing variable amounts of mucin, 22 (44.9%) were MSI-H and 5 (10.2%) were MSI-L. MUC genes were analyzed by Southern blotting and extra bands were evident in the Variable Number Tandem Repetition (VNTR) regions of MUC2 (5 cases) and MUC5AC (2 cases), but not MUC1 and MUC4 genes. Since the somatic VNTR abnormalities were detected in 6 MSI-H and in 1 MSI-L tumors, they seem to be peculiar of mismatch repair defective CRCs. Our finding suggests that alteration and/or loss of structurally normal MUC genes may be an important step in the neoplastic molecular pathway of a subset of CRCs and that mutations involving VNTR repetitive sequences may exist in MSI tumors as a direct and/or indirect consequence of an inefficient MMR system.

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