Diculescu G L
Victor Babeş Institute of Pathology and Medical Genetics, Bucharest, Romania.
Rom J Physiol. 1997 Jan-Dec;34(1-4):3-17.
The human genome is viewed as a stable collection of about 60,000-70,000 genes--a minority of protein--coding DNA sequences--dispersed in a large majority of noncoding DNA sequences--more than 90 per cent of the entire genome sequences. Some of these ubiquitous noncoding DNA sequences, metonymically called "parasitic DNA," "ballast DNA," "selfish DNA" or "extra DNA," especially, the repeated sequences tandemly organized, are not stable but vary with considerable frequency. Recently, the confused or inadequately known origin of native of pathological variations of these DNA sequences appears to be unravelled, with great implications in genome stability. The human chromosomes, the bearer of genome, store and carry it. Their structure is qualified to perform its fastidious functions. The chromosomal conformation, "with variable geometry," exposed to genetoxic action of different damaging factors and to torsional stress after their fast and repeated changes during mitosis. The exaggerate exceeding of the native variation of human genome in disease states, probably, generates genome instability. The chromosome fragility--the cellular phenotypic expression of these molecular instability--reflects the closely relations between the genome and its carrier. The pattern of DNA replication with asynchrony of different domains of "parcelled" genome and the results of replication, susceptible to be corrected by the action of DNA repair genes, render certain limited regions of genome more vulnerable to damaging. These "target" regions focused damaging effects and exhibit an increased susceptibility to breakage and recombination, often with chromosomal expression. The coincidence of these regions, frequently, with locations of many protooncogenes and sometimes, antioncogenes could be subsequently, starting points for a genuine chain of genomic events related to growth cell and cell division. Cancer multistage accumulation of various genomic disorders in a single cell tends to take advantage of discriminating situations of these regions, which themselves can generate other genetic disorders, involving its in carcinogenesis. The gene expression disorders or the genuine mutations of dominant protooncogenes and the recessive behaviour of antioncogenes explain the nature of human cancers--a mixture of inherited and somatically acquired gene disorders. They attest the recessive characteristic of human cell malignancy and emphasize the decisive role of cancer predisposition which operates in interaction with damaging environmental factors. Seemingly, the pivotal causes of genome instability originate from strange behaviour of certain repeated DNA sequences dispersed throughout the human genome. Perhaps they hold the key to the puzzle of cancer processes.
人类基因组被视为约6万至7万个基因的稳定集合——少数为蛋白质编码DNA序列——分散在绝大多数非编码DNA序列中——占整个基因组序列的90%以上。这些无处不在的非编码DNA序列,转喻地称为“寄生DNA”“无用DNA”“自私DNA”或“额外DNA”,尤其是串联组织的重复序列,并不稳定,而是以相当高的频率发生变化。最近,这些DNA序列病理性变异的来源似乎已被厘清,这对基因组稳定性具有重大意义。人类染色体作为基因组的载体,储存并携带基因组。其结构使其能够执行精细的功能。染色体构象“具有可变几何形状”,在有丝分裂期间快速且重复变化后,会受到不同损伤因子的基因毒性作用和扭转应力。在疾病状态下,人类基因组固有变异的过度增加可能会导致基因组不稳定。染色体脆性——这些分子不稳定的细胞表型表达——反映了基因组与其载体之间的密切关系。“分割”基因组不同区域复制的异步性以及复制结果,易受DNA修复基因作用的校正,使得基因组的某些有限区域更容易受到损伤。这些“靶”区域集中了损伤效应,并且对断裂和重组表现出更高的敏感性,常常伴有染色体表达。这些区域常常与许多原癌基因的位置重合,有时也与抑癌基因的位置重合,随后可能成为与生长细胞和细胞分裂相关的一系列真正基因组事件的起点。癌症是单个细胞中各种基因组紊乱的多阶段积累,倾向于利用这些区域的特殊情况,而这些区域本身又会引发其他遗传紊乱,从而参与致癌过程。基因表达紊乱或显性原癌基因的真正突变以及抑癌基因的隐性行为解释了人类癌症的本质——一种遗传和体细胞获得性基因紊乱的混合体。它们证明了人类细胞恶性肿瘤的隐性特征,并强调了癌症易感性在与有害环境因素相互作用中所起的决定性作用。看似基因组不稳定的关键原因源于散布在人类基因组中的某些重复DNA序列的异常行为。也许它们掌握着癌症发生过程之谜的关键。