[HTML][HTML] Palladin Mutation Causes Familial Pancreatic Cancer and Suggests a New Cancer Mechanism

KL Pogue-Geile, RU Chen, MP Bronner… - PLoS …, 2006 - journals.plos.org
KL Pogue-Geile, RU Chen, MP Bronner, T Crnogorac-Jurcevic, KW Moyes, S Dowen…
PLoS medicine, 2006journals.plos.org
Background Pancreatic cancer is a deadly disease. Discovery of the mutated genes that
cause the inherited form (s) of the disease may shed light on the mechanism (s) of
oncogenesis. Previously we isolated a susceptibility locus for familial pancreatic cancer to
chromosome location 4q32–34. In this study, our goal was to discover the identity of the
familial pancreatic cancer gene on 4q32 and determine the function of that gene. Methods
and Findings A customized microarray of the candidate chromosomal region affecting …
Background
Pancreatic cancer is a deadly disease. Discovery of the mutated genes that cause the inherited form(s) of the disease may shed light on the mechanism(s) of oncogenesis. Previously we isolated a susceptibility locus for familial pancreatic cancer to chromosome location 4q32–34. In this study, our goal was to discover the identity of the familial pancreatic cancer gene on 4q32 and determine the function of that gene.
Methods and Findings
A customized microarray of the candidate chromosomal region affecting pancreatic cancer susceptibility revealed the greatest expression change in palladin (PALLD), a gene that encodes a component of the cytoskeleton that controls cell shape and motility. A mutation causing a proline (hydrophobic) to serine (hydrophilic) amino acid change (P239S) in a highly conserved region tracked with all affected family members and was absent in the non-affected members. The mutational change is not a known single nucleotide polymorphism. Palladin RNA, measured by quantitative RT-PCR, was overexpressed in the tissues from precancerous dysplasia and pancreatic adenocarcinoma in both familial and sporadic disease. Transfection of wild-type and P239S mutant palladin gene constructs into HeLa cells revealed a clear phenotypic effect: cells expressing P239S palladin exhibited cytoskeletal changes, abnormal actin bundle assembly, and an increased ability to migrate.
Conclusions
These observations suggest that the presence of an abnormal palladin gene in familial pancreatic cancer and the overexpression of palladin protein in sporadic pancreatic cancer cause cytoskeletal changes in pancreatic cancer and may be responsible for or contribute to the tumor's strong invasive and migratory abilities.
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