Marx S, Spiegel A M, Skarulis M C, Doppman J L, Collins F S, Liotta L A
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 1998 Sep 15;129(6):484-94. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-129-6-199809150-00011.
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) consists of benign, and sometimes malignant, tumors (often multiple in a tissue) of the parathyroids, enteropancreatic neuroendocrine system, anterior pituitary, and other tissues. Skin angiofibromas and skin collagenomas are common. Typically, MEN1 tumors begin two decades earlier than sporadic tumors. Because of tumor multiplicity and the tendency for postoperative tumor recurrence, specialized methods have been developed for preoperative and intraoperative localization of many MEN1-associated tumors. The MEN1 gene was recently isolated by positional cloning. This strategy progressively narrows the size of the candidate MEN1 gene interval on the chromosome and then finds and tests many or, if needed, all genes within that interval. The MEN1 gene was finally identified because it was the one gene that contained mutations in most DNAs from a test panel of MEN1 cases. It has been suggested that MEN1, like many hereditary cancer syndromes, is caused by mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that contributes to neoplasia when both gene copies in a tumor precursor cell have been sequentially inactivated ("two-hit" oncogenesis mechanism). Germline MEN1 mutations were found in most families with MEN1 and in most cases of sporadic MEN1. In addition, the MEN1 gene was the gene most likely to show acquired mutation in several sporadic or nonhereditary tumors-parathyroid adenomas, gastrinomas, insulinomas, and bronchial carcinoids. Most germline or acquired MEN1 mutations predicted truncation (and thus likely inactivation) of the encoded protein, supporting expectations for the "first hit" to a tumor suppressor gene. Testing for MEN1 germline mutation is possible in a research setting. Candidates for MEN1 mutation testing include patients with MEN1 or its phenocopies and first-degree relatives of persons with MEN1.
1型多发性内分泌肿瘤(MEN1)由甲状旁腺、肠胰神经内分泌系统、垂体前叶和其他组织的良性肿瘤(有时为恶性肿瘤,通常在一个组织中为多个)组成。皮肤血管纤维瘤和皮肤胶原瘤很常见。通常,MEN1肿瘤比散发性肿瘤早二十年出现。由于肿瘤的多发性以及术后肿瘤复发的倾向,已经开发出专门的方法用于许多与MEN1相关肿瘤的术前和术中定位。MEN1基因最近通过定位克隆被分离出来。该策略逐步缩小染色体上候选MEN1基因区间的大小,然后在该区间内找到并测试许多基因,如有需要,测试所有基因。MEN1基因最终被确定,因为它是在一组MEN1病例的大多数DNA中含有突变的唯一基因。有人提出,MEN1与许多遗传性癌症综合征一样,是由肿瘤抑制基因突变引起的,当肿瘤前体细胞中的两个基因拷贝依次失活时,该突变会导致肿瘤形成(“两次打击”致癌机制)。在大多数MEN1家族和大多数散发性MEN1病例中都发现了种系MEN1突变。此外,MEN1基因是在几种散发性或非遗传性肿瘤——甲状旁腺腺瘤、胃泌素瘤、胰岛素瘤和支气管类癌中最有可能显示获得性突变的基因。大多数种系或获得性MEN1突变预计会导致编码蛋白的截短(从而可能失活),这支持了对肿瘤抑制基因“首次打击”的预期。在研究环境中可以进行MEN1种系突变检测。MEN1突变检测的候选对象包括患有MEN1或其表型相似疾病的患者以及MEN1患者的一级亲属。