Close correlation between restriction fragment length polymorphism of the L-MYC gene and metastasis of human lung cancer to the lymph nodes and other organs (cancer
ABSTRACTRestriction length fragment polymorphism of the L-MYC gene was examined in DNAs from lung cancer tissues and normal tissues of 51 Japanese patients with lung cancer. In individual patients, no difference was seen between the restriction length fragments of the two alleles of L-MYC [6-kilobase (kb) and 10-kb fragments in EcoRI digests] in lung cancer tissues and normal tissues. But a striking correlation was found between the restriction length fragment polymorphism pattern of L-MYC and the extent of metastasis, particularly to the lymph nodes at the time of surgery: Patients with only the L band (10 kb) had few lymph node metastatic lesions, whereas patients with either the S band (6 kb) or the S and L bands almost always had lymph node metastatic lesion. A similar correlation was found between the presence of the S band and metastases to other organs. This correlation was particularly marked in cases of adenocarcinoma. These results indicate a clear genetic influence on metastases and a consequent poor prognosis for certain patients of lung cancer; L-MYC restriction length fragment polymorphism is thus shown to be a useful marker for predicting the metastatic potential of human lung cancer.
Infantile autism was diagnosed by DSM-III criteria in 132 children (26 girls) who were outpatients of the Tsuchiura Child Guidance Center during the years 1977-1985. The children, all Japanese except for one Laotian boy born in Laos, were classified according to year and month of birth. The prevalence rate of infantile autism in southern Ibaraki, Japan, within the birth cohort born between 1972 and 1978 was 13.9/10,000 children. The month of birth for infantile autism increased in the second quarter of the year. The prevalence rate of infantile autism in each 1-year birth cohort fluctuated in a 4-year cycle, which was closely correlated (r = .92) with the number of children admitted with pneumonia and bronchiolitis in that area. These findings led us to postulate that infectious factors of children's pneumonia and bronchiolitis may have some role in the cause of infantile autism.
For further study of the correlation of L-myc restriction-fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) and metastasis of lung cancer to lymph nodes or other organs at the time of surgery, L-myc RFLP was analyzed in 252 Japanese lung-cancer patients. A close correlation between L-myc RFLP and metastasis was confirmed in this large number of patients (p = 0.01). The correlation was particularly pronounced in cases of adenocarcinoma and squamous-cell carcinoma. Poor prognosis (additional metastases after surgery) was observed in lung-cancer patients with L-S (identified as long and short bands produced with EcoRI) and S-S type L-myc RFLP. In addition, the death rate of lung-cancer patients with the L-S and S-S types was greater than that of those with the L-L type. Lung-cancer patients of the L-S and S-S types had almost 4 times higher incidence of multiple cancer in the lung, pharynx and other organs than those with the L-L type. Our results indicate that, in patients with lung cancer, genetic disposition with respect to the L-myc gene influences the extent of metastasis, the incidence of multiple cancers and prognosis.
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