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Surprisingly High Number of Genes are Mutated in Colon and Breast Cancers
volume 5 | issue 10
october 2006Page 1256
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Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center scientists have completed the first draft of
the genetic code for breast and colon cancers. Their report, published online
in the September 7, 2006 issue of Science Express, identifies close to 200
mutated genes, now linked to these cancers, most of which were not previously
recognized as associated with tumor initiation, growth, spread or control.
“Just as sequencing the human genome laid the groundwork for subsequent
research in genetics, these data lay the foundation for decades of research on
colon and breast cancers,” says Victor Velculescu, M.D., Ph.D., assistant
professor of oncology at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.
Although gene discoveries by independent scientists scattered around the world
have provided clues, Velculescu says relatively few genes have been shown to be
altered in cancers. The Hopkins gene hunters say the number of genes that were
altered in breast and colorectal cancer genomes surprised them. “We expected
to find a handful of genes, not 200,” says Tobias Sjöblom, a lead author and
postdoctoral fellow at Hopkins’ Kimmel Cancer Center.
Despite the potential rewards envisioned by cancer biologists, efforts to map
cancer genes have drawn criticism from others who say that funding dollars
should be spent on projects yielding more immediate benefits for detection and
treatment.
“These are good debates to have,” says Kenneth Kinzler, Ph.D., professor of
oncology and co-director of the Ludwig Center at Johns Hopkins, but “we are
convinced that this kind of study will provide one of the best road maps
possible for beating cancer. Who would pass up the opportunity to read the
enemy’s game plan?”
Some gene alterations already have led to successful detection and treatment
strategies. These include the breast cancer drug Herceptin – which targets a
breast cancer cell receptor made by the Her2-neu gene -- and blood tests for
hereditary colon cancer, based on the APC gene and others identified by the
Hopkins group.
“Cancer scientists recognize that merely identifying pieces of DNA that have a
role in the disease is a beginning, not an end to our work,” says Bert
Vogelstein, M.D., an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and
co-director of the Ludwig Center at Johns Hopkins, “but by using a more
systematic method to identify genes that play an essential role in cancer, we
will be able to guide that work.”
The Hopkins team began their project with 11 samples each from breast and colon
cancers, removed from patients after surgery. Within each tumor cell, billions
of individual chemicals called nucleotides pair together in a preprogrammed
fashion to build the rungs of a DNA ladder that compose genetic instructions.
Changes called mutations in the nucleotides can create coding errors that
transform a normal cell into a cancerous one.
To locate the altered nucleotides, the scientists compared the genetic code of
their tumor samples with normal ones. First, they used the Human Genome Project
(HGP) to identify the sequences of best-known genes – more than 13,000 in all –
roughly two-thirds of the total number of genes identified by the HGP. The
actual number of human genes is still in dispute, but is estimated to be about
20,000.
Then, in each tumor, the scientists examined the DNA code of these 13,000 genes
by dividing each gene into overlapping sections – about 10 per gene – to get
130,000 sections for analysis. Each segment was amplified through a process
called polymerase chain reaction, purified, and its sequence determined using
more than three million biochemical reactions. The sequences were fed through
computer software that matches up normal sequences with those from tumor
samples. The software highlighted more than 800,000 suspicious regions that
were visually inspected, one by one, to verify that they were true mutations
that altered protein code rather than normal variations or minor changes with
no effect on the gene product.
In total, the Hopkins team combed through 465 million nucleotides – several
encyclopedias’ worth of letters – to find approximately 1,500 DNA nucleotides
that differed from the normal code in important ways. Virtually all these
mistakes were mere single-nucleotide “typos.” Some 200 genes were
significantly mutated; the mutated genes in breast and colon cancers were
almost completely distinct, suggesting very different pathways for the
development of each of these cancer types.
Says Kinzler, “This gives us some understanding of why breast and colon
cancers, and most likely other cancers as well, are very different diseases and
develop through different processes. When we say this will drive cancer
research for the next couple of decades, this is one of the reasons. Now
researchers will study how these mutations occur in breast and colon cancers,
perhaps searching for environmental agents or cellular processes that drive
these changes.”
The Hopkins team also found that the average number of mutant genes in each
cancer is about 100, and at least 20 are likely to be crucial for tumor
formation. “Each cancer has a different blueprint,” says Velculescu. “No two
patients are identical.”
Other cancers also can be evaluated using the Hopkins approach, which they say
has been developed over the past two decades and made possible through recent
advances in DNA sequencing and bioinformatics.
“These findings will guide and provide support for future comprehensive genetic
studies including those envisioned by The Cancer Genome Atlas Project,” says
Vogelstein. Future research will include performing similar analyses on other
tumors types, charting the pathways through which each mutant gene acts, and
looking for common mutations that can be targeted with cancer drugs or used to
detect the disease earlier.
This research was supported by the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer
Research, the National Institutes of Health, Department of Defense, Pew
Charitable Trusts, Palmetto Health Foundation, Maryland Cigarette Restitution
Fund, State of Ohio Biomedical Research and Technology Transfer Commission,
Clayton Fund, David and Barbara Hirschhorn Foundation, National Colorectal
Cancer Research Alliance, Strang Cancer Prevention Center, Avon Foundation,
Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute and the V Foundation for Cancer
Research.
The Johns Hopkins research team also includes Siân Jones, Laura D. Wood, D.
Williams Parsons, Jimmy Lin, Thomas Barber, Diana Mandelker, Rebecca J. Leary,
Janine Ptak, Natalie Silliman, Steve Szabo, Giovanni Parmigiani, Ben Ho Park
and Nickolas Papadopoulos. Other authors include Phillip Buckhaults,
Christopher Farrell, and Paul Meeh from the University of South Carolina;
Sanford D. Markowitz from Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals
of Cleveland and Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Joseph Willis and Dawn Dawson
from Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals of Cleveland;
James K. V. Willson and Adi F. Gazdar from the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center; James Hartigan from Agencourt Bioscience Corporation; Leo Wu
and Changsheng Liu from SoftGenetics LLC; and Kurtis E. Bachman from the
University of Maryland Greenebaum Cancer Cancer.
This is an open-access article
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.





