Reed J A, Loganzo F, Shea C R, Walker G J, Flores J F, Glendening J M, Bogdany J K, Shiel M J, Haluska F G, Fountain J W
Department of Immunology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Cancer Res. 1995 Jul 1;55(13):2713-8.
Sporadic and familial malignant melanoma susceptibility has been linked to defects in the chromosomal region 9p21. Recently, a putative 9p21 tumor suppressor gene, the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2 (CDKN2) or p16 gene, has been shown to be deleted, mutated, or rearranged in a high percentage of sporadic melanoma cell lines, as well as mutated in the germline of a proportion of familial melanoma patients. CDKN2 encodes a M(r) 16,000 protein (p16) that plays a key role in cell cycle control by binding to the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 enzyme and inhibiting its ability to phosphorylate critical substrates necessary for transition past the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Thus, mutations or deletions of the CDKN2 gene could result in abnormal proliferation via defective cell cycle control. The correlation of 9p21 cytogenetic and molecular alterations with the clinical stages of melanoma progression suggests that dysfunction of a gene within this chromosomal region is critical to the evolution of melanoma. However, it remains unclear whether this gene is the CDKN2 gene. If so, then loss of p16 is potentially an initiating or early event in melanoma progression. To address the issues of what is the potential involvement of the CDKN2 gene in sporadic melanoma and precisely when during the clinically evident stages of melanoma progression defects in CDKN2 occur, we have evaluated by immunohistochemistry the expression of p16 protein in 103 melanocytic lesions representing all stages in the progression of melanoma. Our results suggest that loss of p16 protein expression is (a) not necessary for tumor initiation in malignant melanoma because all melanomas in situ and the majority of primary invasive melanomas retain expression of this protein; and (b) potentially more related to invasiveness or the ability to metastasize, because 52% of primary invasive tumors and 72% of metastatic lesions show partial or complete loss of expression of p16.
散发性和家族性恶性黑色素瘤易感性与9号染色体区域9p21的缺陷有关。最近,一种假定的9p21肿瘤抑制基因,即细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶抑制剂2(CDKN2)或p16基因,已被证明在高比例的散发性黑色素瘤细胞系中发生缺失、突变或重排,并且在一部分家族性黑色素瘤患者的种系中也发生了突变。CDKN2编码一种分子量为16,000的蛋白质(p16),该蛋白质通过与细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶4酶结合并抑制其磷酸化细胞周期G1期过渡所需关键底物的能力,在细胞周期控制中起关键作用。因此,CDKN2基因的突变或缺失可能通过有缺陷的细胞周期控制导致异常增殖。9p21细胞遗传学和分子改变与黑色素瘤进展临床分期的相关性表明,该染色体区域内一个基因的功能障碍对黑色素瘤的演变至关重要。然而,目前尚不清楚该基因是否就是CDKN2基因。如果是这样,那么p16的缺失可能是黑色素瘤进展中的一个起始或早期事件。为了解决CDKN2基因在散发性黑色素瘤中的潜在作用以及在黑色素瘤进展的临床明显阶段中CDKN2缺陷究竟何时发生的问题,我们通过免疫组织化学评估了103个代表黑色素瘤进展所有阶段的黑素细胞病变中p16蛋白的表达。我们的结果表明,p16蛋白表达的缺失(a)对于恶性黑色素瘤的肿瘤起始并非必要,因为所有原位黑色素瘤和大多数原发性浸润性黑色素瘤都保留了该蛋白的表达;(b)可能与侵袭性或转移能力更相关,因为52%的原发性浸润性肿瘤和72%的转移性病变显示p16表达部分或完全缺失。