Abstract
One hundred and nine samples comprising carcinomas, adenomas, dysplastic, inflamed and normal mucosa from patients with sporadic colon cancer and ulcerative colitis (UC) were analysed for c-Ki-ras mutations. DNA was extracted from archival paraffin-embedded material, amplified using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and the PCR products analysed using restriction enzyme digestion. Forty-two per cent (14/33) of the sporadic carcinoma controls contained KA-ras codon 12 mutations in contrast to 24% (8/33) of ulcerative colitis carcinomas. A significantly higher c-Ki-ras mutation rate was observed in rectal carcinomas (72%) in comparison to colonic carcinomas (28%) in control patients (P<0. 04), while the opposite was observed in UC patients. The difference between the incidence of c-Ki-ras mutations in rectal carcinomas in UC (9%) and in sporadic rectal carcinomas (72%) was also significant (P<0. 01). This lower prevalence rate and different site distribution of c-Ki-ras mutations in UC carcinomas compared to sporadic carcinomas suggests that specific genetic differences may underlie the causation of carcinomas arising in these situations. © 1991 Macmillan Press Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Bell, S. M., Kelly, S. A., Hoyle, J. A., Lewis, F. A., Dixon, M. F., Quirke, P., … Thompson, H. (1991). C-ki-ras gene mutations in dysplasia and carcinomas complicating ulcerative colitis. British Journal of Cancer, 64(1), 174–178. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1991.264
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