Mutation to mismatch repair gene linked to colorectal cancer
Colorectal cancer includes cancerous growths in the colon, rectum and appendix. It is the third most common form of cancer. Many colorectal cancers are thought to arise from polyps in the colon. Diagnosis is by colonoscopy. Therapy is usually through surgery, with many cases also requiring chemotherapy.
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Mutation to mismatch repair gene linked to colorectal cancer

Colorectal Cancer :: Mutation to mismatch repair gene linked to colorectal cancer

Colorectal Cancer :: Mutation to mismatch repair gene linked to colorectal cancer

Patients with a variant of a DNA repair gene, known as MLH1, may have an increased risk of a subtype of colorectal cancer.

Mismatch repair genes fix problems that arise during DNA replication when bases are incorrectly paired. Mutations in these repair genes are associated with increased risks of cancer.

Stavroula Raptis and Miralem Mrkonjic, graduate students at the University of Toronto, and colleagues analyzed two DNA mismatch repair genes, MLH1 and MSH2, in 1,359 colorectal cancer patients and 1,373 controls from Ontario and Newfoundland.

One particular variant in the MLH1 gene, -93G>A, was strongly associated with colorectal cancer. Patients with two copies of this version of the gene had a greater risk of colorectal cancer than patients with only one.

"Decreased levels of MLH1 expression associated with [MLH1 -93G>A] may lead to impaired cell cycle control, allowing cells to proceed with cell division before proper DNA repair can be accomplished. This impaired control would overwhelm the mismatch repair mechanism, leading to the accumulation of mutations," the authors write.

(Published at www.spiritindia.com on Tuesday, March 20, 2007)
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