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Gene's Position in the Nucleus Can be Used to Distinguish Cancerous from Normal Breast Tissue

Date:2009-12-08 08:29From:Network Author:Network Click:
Gene's Position in the Nucleus Can be Used to Distinguish Cancerous from Normal Breast Tissue Researchers have identified several genes whose spatial position inside the cell nucleus is altered in invasive breast cancer when compared to norm
   Gene's Position in the Nucleus Can be Used to Distinguish Cancerous from Normal Breast Tissue

Researchers have identified several genes whose spatial position inside the cell nucleus is altered in invasive breast cancer when compared to normal breast tissue. The findings suggest that cancer cells may have disease-specific, three-dimensional gene arrangements and raise the possibility that such gene positioning patterns could be used as a new diagnostic strategy to distinguish cancer tissue from normal tissue. The study, by researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, appeared online Dec. 7, 2009, and will appear in print on Dec. 14, 2009 in the Journal of Cell Biology.

Chromosomes and individual genes have been found to occupy specific locations relative to one another and to landmarks within the cell nucleus. The spatial organization of genes can change during a number of normal bodily processes. Alterations of spatial organization also occur in disease states such as cancer. The distinctive changes in shape and size of the cell nucleus, which pathologists use routinely as indicators of whether or not cancer is present, suggest that major changes in spatial gene organization also occur in cancer cell nuclei.

"In our study, we set out to identify genes which are differentially positioned in breast cancer tissues and we explored the possibility that disease-specific spatial organization of genes might be used as a new diagnostic strategy to distinguish malignant from normal tissue," said senior author Tom Misteli, Ph.D., of NCI's Center for Cancer Research.

Individual gene loci (red, green) visualized in cell nuclei (blue) of breast tissue.

To identify genes which occupy distinct positions inside the nucleus in normal and malignant cells, the researchers visualized a set of 20 genes using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), a technique to detect and localize specific DNA sequences in intact cells in a set of 11 normal human breast and 14 invasive cancer tissue specimens. The scientists identified eight genes with a high frequency of repositioning in cancer specimens. Only a minority of tested genes underwent significant repositioning in a given cancer tissue, suggesting that repositioning is gene-specific and does not reflect a large-scale alteration in gene organization. The repositioning events were also not due to a common cellular occurrence known as genomic instability, which is often associated with cancer, because repositioning did not correlate with changes in the number of copies of the gene present in the cell.

The scientists next used the tissue specimens to test whether gene repositioning could distinguish cancer from normal and non-cancerous tissues. They found that the position of a single gene,

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