An X chromosome gene, WTX, is commonly inactivated in Wilms tumor.
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Cited by: 275
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Abstract

Wilms tumor is a pediatric kidney cancer associated with inactivation of the WT1 tumor-suppressor gene in 5 to 10% of cases. Using a high-resolution screen for DNA copy-number alterations in Wilms tumor, we identified somatic deletions targeting a previously uncharacterized gene on the X chromosome. This gene, which we call WTX, is inactivated in approximately one-third of Wilms tumors (15 of 51 tumors). Tumors with mutations in WTX lack WT1 mutations, and both genes share a restricted temporal and spatial expression pattern in normal renal precursors. In contrast to biallelic inactivation of autosomal tumor-suppressor genes, WTX is inactivated by a monoallelic "single-hit" event targeting the single X chromosome in tumors from males and the active X chromosome in tumors from females.

Keywords

Spatial Gene Expression

MeSH terms

Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
Alleles
Amino Acid Sequence
Animals
Cell Line
Chromosome Deletion
Chromosomes, Human, X
Female
Gene Expression
Gene Silencing
Genes, Wilms Tumor
Heterozygote
Humans
In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
Kidney
Kidney Neoplasms
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Molecular Sequence Data
Mutation
Point Mutation
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Wilms Tumor
beta Catenin

Authors

Rivera, Miguel N
Kim, Woo Jae
Wells, Julie
Driscoll, David R
Brannigan, Brian W
Han, Moonjoo
Kim, James C
Feinberg, Andrew P
Gerald, William L
Vargas, Sara O
Chin, Lynda
Iafrate, A John
Bell, Daphne W
Haber, Daniel A

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