TY - JOUR A1 - Tomei, Sara A1 - Adams, Sharon A1 - Uccellini, Lorenzo A1 - Bedognetti, Davide A1 - De Giorgi, Valeria A1 - Erdenebileg, Narnygerel A1 - Libera Ascierto, Maria A1 - Reinboth, Jennifer A1 - Liu, Qiuzhen A1 - Bevilacqua, Generoso A1 - Wang, Ena A1 - Mazzanti, Chiara A1 - Marincola, Francesco M. T1 - Association between HRAS rs12628 and rs112587690 polymorphisms with the risk of melanoma in the North American population JF - Medical Oncology N2 - HRAS belongs to the RAS genes superfamily. RAS genes are important players in several human tumors and the single-nucleotide polymorphism rs12628 has been shown to contribute to the risk of bladder, colon, gastrointestinal, oral, and thyroid carcinoma. We hypothesized that this SNP may affect the risk of cutaneous melanoma as well. HRAS gene contains a polymorphic region (rs112587690), a repeated hexanucleotide -GGGCCT- located in intron 1. Three alleles of this region, P1, P2, and P3, have been identified that contain two, three, and four repeats of the hexanucleotide, respectively. We investigated the clinical impact of these polymorphisms in a case–control study. A total of 141 melanoma patients and 118 healthy donors from the North America Caucasian population were screened for rs12628 and rs112587690 polymorphisms. Genotypes were assessed by capillary sequencing or fragment analysis, respectively, and rs12628 CC and rs112587690 P1P1 genotypes significantly associated with increased melanoma risk (OR = 3.83, p = 0.003; OR = 11.3, p = 0.033, respectively), while rs112587690 P1P3 frequency resulted significantly higher in the control group (OR = 0.5, p = 0.017). These results suggest that rs12628 C homozygosis may be considered a potential risk factor for melanoma development in the North American population possibly through the linkage to rs112587690. KW - HRAS KW - polymorphism KW - melanoma KW - rs12628 KW - rs112587690 Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126834 VL - 29 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spivey, Tara L. A1 - De Giorgi, Valeria A1 - Zhao, Yingdong A1 - Bedognetti, Davide A1 - Pos, Zoltan A1 - Liu, Qiuzhen A1 - Tomei, Sara A1 - Ascierto, Maria Libera A1 - Uccellini, Lorenzo A1 - Reinboth, Jennifer A1 - Chouchane, Lotfi A1 - Stroncek, David F. A1 - Wang, Ena A1 - Marincola, Francesco M. T1 - The stable traits of melanoma genetics: an alternate approach to target discovery JF - BMC Genomics N2 - Background: The weight that gene copy number plays in transcription remains controversial; although in specific cases gene expression correlates with copy number, the relationship cannot be inferred at the global level. We hypothesized that genes steadily expressed by 15 melanoma cell lines (CMs) and their parental tissues (TMs) should be critical for oncogenesis and their expression most frequently influenced by their respective copy number. Results: Functional interpretation of 3,030 transcripts concordantly expressed (Pearson's correlation coefficient p-value < 0.05) by CMs and TMs confirmed an enrichment of functions crucial to oncogenesis. Among them, 968 were expressed according to the transcriptional efficiency predicted by copy number analysis (Pearson's correlation coefficient p-value < 0.05). We named these genes, "genomic delegates" as they represent at the transcriptional level the genetic footprint of individual cancers. We then tested whether the genes could categorize 112 melanoma metastases. Two divergent phenotypes were observed: one with prevalent expression of cancer testis antigens, enhanced cyclin activity, WNT signaling, and a Th17 immune phenotype (Class A). This phenotype expressed, therefore, transcripts previously associated to more aggressive cancer. The second class (B) prevalently expressed genes associated with melanoma signaling including MITF, melanoma differentiation antigens, and displayed a Th1 immune phenotype associated with better prognosis and likelihood to respond to immunotherapy. An intermediate third class (C) was further identified. The three phenotypes were confirmed by unsupervised principal component analysis. Conclusions: This study suggests that clinically relevant phenotypes of melanoma can be retraced to stable oncogenic properties of cancer cells linked to their genetic back bone, and offers a roadmap for uncovering novel targets for tailored anti-cancer therapy. KW - tumors KW - comparative genomic hybridization KW - coloteral cancer KW - prognostic relevance KW - aquired resistance KW - malignant melanoma KW - antigen expression KW - tissue microarray KW - cell carcinoma KW - T cells Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131992 VL - 13 IS - 156 ER -