New gene
amplification findings could benefit cancer
research
Gene amplification plays an
important role in causing cancers via activation of
ontogeny.
If
scientists can determine the rules as to which segments of
genetic material become amplified and how, oncologists and
drug researchers may be able to interrupt that process and
prevent the formation and growth of some tumors.
Using
yeast as a model organism, researchers at the Georgia
Institute of Technology have discovered that the location of
a hairpin-capped break relative to the end of the chromosome
will determine the fate of the amplification event
Gene
amplification is the increase in copy number of a particular
piece of DNA and is a hallmark of tumor cells. Amplified
genomic segments are frequently manifested in one of two
cytological recognizable forms. Double minutes are extra
chromosomal segments of amplified DNA. Homogeneously
staining regions are amplified intrachromosomal segments
forming large genomic regions. Some strategies of
pharmaceutical research in cancer prevention and treatment
could involve curbing cancer development via restricting
gene amplification. The first step towards achieving this is
to discover the rules that govern whether an amplification
event is a double minute or a homogenously-staining region.
It's
known that regions of chromosomes that are prone to
amplification have palindromic sequences of DNA, which are
weak places where the chromosome can break. These
palindromic sequences can be naturally found in human
genome. The distribution of such sequences can vary from one
individual to another. Researchers at the Georgia Institute
of Technology have discovered that a particular type of DNA
break, a hairpin-capped double strand break, induced by
these palindromic sequences, is a precursor to
amplification.
"We
have a developed a system in yeast which would mimic the
situation in human cancer cells wherein oncogenes might be
located next to palindromic sequences. Using this system we
have discovered the rules that determine how double minutes
or homogeneously staining regions can be generated," said
Kirill Lobachev, assistant professor in Georgia Tech's
School of Biology.
"If
these rules operating in yeast can be extended to higher
eukaryotes then we can propose that if the oncogene is
located between the hairpin-capped break and the telomere,
then the amplification event will result in a double minute.
If the break occurs between the oncogene and the telomere,
then the amplification would yield a homogenously-staining
region." adds Vidhya Narayanan a Ph.D. student in Kirill
Lobachev's lab and first author of the study.
The
findings can help researchers understand the cause of cancer
in diseased individuals and also to potentially identify
individuals who might be prone for cancer.