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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Point mutation of the E-cadherin gene in invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast.

Reduced or heterogeneous expression of E-cadherin has been demonstrated immunohistochemically in poorly differentiated carcinoma, which frequently shows weak intercellular adhesiveness and marked invasiveness. In vitro, not only reduced expression but also structural abnormalities of E-cadherin have been observed in human carcinoma cell lines which grow in a loosely adhering manner. To clarify the participation of structural abnormalities of E-cadherin in cancer invasion in vivo, sequence abnormalities were examined in the cadherin domain (exons 5, 6, 7 and 8) including the region essential for E-cadherin specific binding, using the polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism method and direct sequencing in invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast, in which cancer cells become detached from each other and invade the stroma in a particularly scattered pattern. In 2 (10%) of the 20 cases examined, an identical sequence abnormality was detected in E-cadherin exon 7, i.e. a point mutation of codon 315 ( AAT to AGT) which resulted in a single amino acid substitution (asparagine to serine). This mutation may abolish the E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion and be at least partly responsible for the weak intercellular adhesiveness and scattered histological pattern of the tumor.[1]

References

  1. Point mutation of the E-cadherin gene in invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast. Kanai, Y., Oda, T., Tsuda, H., Ochiai, A., Hirohashi, S. Jpn. J. Cancer Res. (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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