Vessey C J, Norbury C J, Hickson I D
Imperial Cancer Research Fund Laboratories, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, United Kingdom.
Prog Nucleic Acid Res Mol Biol. 1999;63:189-221. doi: 10.1016/s0079-6603(08)60723-0.
Genomic instability in its broadest sense is a feature of virtually all neoplastic cells. In addition to the mutations and/or gene amplifications that appear to be a prerequisite for the acquisition of a neoplastic phenotype, human cancers exhibit other "markers" of genomic instability--in particular, a high degree of aneuploidy. Indeed, many studies have shown that aneuploidy is an almost invariant feature of cancer cells, and it has been argued by some that the emergence of aneuploid cells is a necessary step during tumorigenesis. The functional link between genomic instability and cancer is strengthened by the existence of several "genetic instability" disorders of humans that are associated with a moderate to severe increase in the incidence of cancers. These disorders include ataxia telangiectasia, Bloom's syndrome, Fanconi anemia, xeroderma pigmentosum, and Nijmegen breakage syndrome, all of which are very rare and are inherited in a recessive manner. Analysis of the cells from such cancer-prone individuals is clearly a potentially fruitful approach for delineating the genetic basis for instability in the genome. It is assumed that by identifying the underlying cause of genetic instability in these disorders, one can derive valuable information not only about the basis of particular genetic diseases, but also about the underlying causes of genomic instability in sporadic cancers in the general population. In this article, we review the clinical and cellular properties of genetic instability disorders associated with cancer predisposition. In particular, we focus on the rapid advances made in our understanding of these disorders that have derived from the cloning of the genes mutated in each case. Because in many instances the affected genes have analogs in lower eukaryotic species, we shall discuss how studies in yeasts in particular have proved valuable in our understanding of human diseases and predisposition to cancer.
从最广泛的意义上讲,基因组不稳定实际上是所有肿瘤细胞的一个特征。除了那些似乎是获得肿瘤表型的先决条件的突变和/或基因扩增外,人类癌症还表现出基因组不稳定的其他“标志”——特别是高度的非整倍体现象。事实上,许多研究表明非整倍体是癌细胞几乎不变的特征,并且一些人认为非整倍体细胞的出现是肿瘤发生过程中的一个必要步骤。人类的几种“遗传不稳定”疾病与癌症发病率的中度至重度增加相关,这加强了基因组不稳定与癌症之间的功能联系。这些疾病包括共济失调毛细血管扩张症、布卢姆综合征、范可尼贫血、着色性干皮病和奈梅亨断裂综合征,所有这些疾病都非常罕见,并且以隐性方式遗传。分析这些易患癌症个体的细胞显然是描绘基因组不稳定遗传基础的一种潜在有效方法。据推测,通过确定这些疾病中遗传不稳定的根本原因,人们不仅可以获得有关特定遗传疾病基础的有价值信息,还可以获得有关普通人群散发性癌症中基因组不稳定根本原因的信息。在本文中,我们综述了与癌症易感性相关的遗传不稳定疾病的临床和细胞特性。特别是,我们关注在对这些疾病的理解方面取得的快速进展,这些进展源于对每种情况下突变基因的克隆。因为在许多情况下,受影响的基因在低等真核生物中有类似物,所以我们将讨论特别是酵母研究如何在我们对人类疾病和癌症易感性的理解中被证明是有价值的。