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Article
Nature Genetics  33, 33 - 39 (2002)
Published online: 25 November 2002; | doi:10.1038/ng1055

A Robertsonian translocation suppresses a somatic recombination pathway to loss of heterozygosity

Kevin M. Haigis & William F. Dove

McArdle Laboratory for Cancer Research and Laboratory of Genetics, University of Wisconsin−Madison, 1400 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA.

Correspondence should be addressed to William F. Dove dove@oncology.wisc.edu
In mammals, loss of APC/Apc gatekeeper function initiates intestinal tumorigenesis. Several different mechanisms have been shown or proposed to mediate functional loss of APC/Apc: mutation in APC/Apc, non-disjunction, homologous somatic recombination and epigenetic silencing. The demonstration that, in the C57BL/6 (B6) Apc Min/+ mouse model of inherited intestinal cancer, loss of Apc function can occur by loss of heterozygosity (LOH) through somatic recombination between homologs presents an opportunity to search for polymorphisms in the homologous somatic recombination pathway. We report that the Robertsonian translocation Rb(7.18)9Lub (Rb9) suppresses the multiplicity of intestinal adenomas in this mouse model. As the copy number of Rb9 increases, the association with the interphase nucleolus of the rDNA repeats centromeric to the Apc locus on Chromosome 18 is increasingly disrupted. Our analysis shows that homologous somatic recombination is the principal pathway for LOH in adenomas in B6 Apc Min/+ mice. These studies provide additional evidence that neoplastic growth can initiate in the complete absence of canonical genomic instability.

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REFERENCE
Human Chromosome Evolution
Nature Encyclopaedia of Life Sciences
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REVIEWS
MODIFIER GENES IN MICE AND HUMANS
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NEWS AND VIEWS
Somatic recombination redux
Nature Genetics News and Views (01 Jan 2003)

RESEARCH
Contact zone between chromosomal races of Mus musculus domesticus. 2. Fertility and segregation in laboratory-reared and wild mice heterozygous for multiple Robertsonian rearrangements
Heredity Original Article (01 Aug 2000)
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Nature Genetics
ISSN: 1061-4036
EISSN: 1546-1718
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