Category: Tumor Suppressor Gene

Colorectal cancer illustrates how loss of a tumor suppressor gene can lead to cancer

Colorectal cancer illustrates how loss of a tumor suppressor gene can lead to cancer

Colorectal cancer provides one well-studied example of how a tumor suppressor can be identified and its role in tumor growth determined. Colorectal cancer arises from the epithelium lining the colon and rectum; most cases are seen in old people and do not have any discernible hereditary cause.

A small proportion of cases, however, occur in families that are exceptionally prone to the disease and show an unusually early onset. In one set of such “predisposed” families, the affected individuals develop colorectal cancer in early adult life, and the onset their disease is foreshadowed by the development of hundreds or thousands of little tumors, called polyps, in the epithelial lining of the colon and rectum.

By studying these families, investigators traced the development of the polyps to a deletion or inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene called APC – for Adenomatouus Polyposiss Coli. (Note that the protein encoded by this gene is different from the anaphase-promoting complex, also abbreviated APC). Affected individuals inherit one mutant copy is enough for normal behavior, all the cells of these individuals are only one mutational step away from total loss of the gene’s function (as compared to two steps away for a person who inherits two normal copies of the gene). The individual tumors arise from cells that have undergone a somatic mutation that inactivates the remaining good copy. Because the number of new mutations required is smaller, the disease strikes these individuals at an earlier age.

But what about the great majority of colorectal cancer patients, who have inherited two good copies pf APC and do not have the hereditary condition or any significant family history of cancer? When their tumors are analyzed, it turns out that in more than 60% of cases, although both copies of APC are present in the adjacent normal tissues, the tumor cells themselves have lost or inactivated both copies of this gene, presumably through two independent somatic mutations.

All these findings clearly identify APC as a tumor suppressor gene, and knowing its sequence and mutant phenotype, one can begin to decipher how its loss helps to initiate the development of cancer. As explained in “How we know”, the APC gene was found to encode an inhibitory protein that normally restricts the activation of the Wnt signaling pathway, which is involved in stimulating cell proliferation in the crypts og the gut lining, as described earlier. When APC is lost, the pathways is hyperactive and epithelial cells proliferate to excess, generating a polyp. Within this growing mass of tissue, further mutations occur, sometimes resulting in invasive cancer.

Figure. Colorectal cancer often begins with loss of the tumor suppressor gene APC, leading to growth of a polyp.

(A) Thousands of small polyps, and a few much larger ones, are seen in the lining of the colon of a patient with an inherited APC mutation (whereas individuals without an APC mutation might have one or two polyps). Through further mutations, some of these polyps will progress to become invasive cancers, unless the tissue is removed surgically.

(B) Cross section of one such polyp; note the excessive quantities of deeply infolded epithelium, corresponding to crypts full of abnormal, proliferating cells.

A, courtesy of John Northover and Cancer Research UK; B, courtesy of Anne Campbell.

Figure. A polyp in the epithelial lining of the colon or rectum, caused by loss of the APC gene, progress to cancer by accumulation of further mutations.

The diagram shows a sequence of mutations that might underlie a typical case of colorectal cancer. After the initial mutation, all subsequent mutations occur randomly in a single cell that had already acquired the previous mutations. A sequence of events such as that shown here would usually be spread over 10 to 20 years or more. Though most colorectal cancers are thought to begin with loss of the APC tumor suppressor gene, the subsequent sequence of mutations is quite variable; indeed, many polyps never progress to cancer.

Retype from Essential Cell biology chapter 20, p 719-720

RUNX3, suatu gen penekan tumor

Kuliah di Jepang gini kudu banyak baca, karena ternyata ilmu kanker ini berkembang dengan cepat dan saya “megap-megap” untuk selalu mengejar perkembangannya. Kali ini saya bahas RUNX3, suatu gen penekan tumor (tumor suppressor gene). Waktu nulis ini, ga ada gambaran sebenarnya. Ni nulis postingan sambil browsing. Mari kita lihat lebih dekat..

RUNX3 (runt-related transcription factor-3) sudah dikenal menekan tumorigenesis dan metastasis pada berbagai kanker. RUNX3 adalah anggota dari famili RUNX, suatu faktor transkripsi yang meregulasi ekspresi gen pada beberapa proses perkembangan penting seperti hematopoiesis, osteogenesis dan neurogenesis.

Pada tumor padat, RUNX3 seringkali tidak aktif (inaktivasi). Penurunan ekspresi RUNX3 merupakan kejadian awal selama progresi keganasan, dan dengan demikian memberikan petunjuk kuat fungsinya sebagai penekan tumor.

Tinjauan epigenetik

Pada sel-sel tumor, mutasi satu alel dari gen sering disertai dengan hipermetilasi dari alel lainnya, mengakibatkan inaktivasi fungsional gen secara lengkap. Hingga saat ini, hipermetilasi area CpG di promotor RUNX3 merupakan salah satu yang paling umum dari peristiwa metilasi menyimpang pada kanker. Hal ini mengisyaratkan bahwa inaktivasi RUNX3 merupakan faktor risiko yang signifikan untuk tumorigenesis.

Hipermetilasi dan inaktivasi RUNX3 telah dilaporkan terjadi pada berbagai jaringan tumor, termasuk jaringan/sel pada tumor lambung, tumor kandung kemih, tumor usus, tumor payudara, tumor paru-paru, tumor pankreas, tumor otak, dan karsinoma hepatoseluler.

Mengapa bisa mengalami metilasi menyimpang seperti itu? Jawabannya karena ada berbagai penyebab, salah satunya karena onkogen EZH2. Bagaimana mekanismenya?

Gambar 1.

Mekanisme epigentik penekanan (silencing) dari RUNX3. (a) Estrogen menginduksi hipermetilasi dan silencing RUNX3 pada sel diturunkan dari mammosphere. (b) Infeksi H. pylori bisa menginduksi produksi NO, LPS,  dan inflamasi, memicu hipermetilasi dan silencing RUNX3. (c) Hipoksia menginduksi rekrutmen G9a  histon metiltransferase dan HDAC1 ke RUNX3, yang selanjutnya memicu metilasi histon 3 Lys 9 dan deasetilasi H3. (d) Overekspresi EZH2, mungkin hasil dari penurunan microRNA-101, dapat menyebabkan metilasi H3K27 pada promoter RUNX3 dan selanjutnya menekan transkripsi.

Bacaan bagus

Chuang LS, Ito Y. RUNX3 is multifunctional in carcinogenesis of multiple solid tumors. Oncogene. 2010 May 6;29(18):2605-15.

Mekanisme seluler penekanan tumor oleh gen retinoblastoma

  • RB, the retinoblastoma protein, has been identified as a crucial tumour suppressor. It is believed to be directly or indirectly inactivated in nearly all human cancers.
  • RB has been demonstrated to bind to over one hundred protein partners and has been shown to mediate transcriptional regulation of hundreds of target genes. These protein partners and transcriptional targets are thought to mediate the numerous cellular functions of RB, including temporary and permanent cell cycle arrest, genomic stability, apoptosis and differentiation. Continue reading “Mekanisme seluler penekanan tumor oleh gen retinoblastoma”