Determinants of BRAF mutations in primary melanomas Journal Article


Authors: Maldonado, J. L.; Fridlyand, J.; Patel, H.; Jain, A. N.; Busam, K.; Kageshita, T.; Ono, T.; Albertson, D. G.; Pinkel, D.; Bastian, B. C.
Article Title: Determinants of BRAF mutations in primary melanomas
Abstract: The RAS/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway sends external growth-promoting signals to the nucleus. BRAF, a critical serine/threonine kinase in this pathway, is frequently activated by somatic mutation in melanoma. Using a cohort of 115 patients with primary invasive melanomas, we show that BRAF mutations are statistically significantly more common in melanomas occurring on skin subject to intermittent sun exposure than elsewhere (23 of 43 patients; P<.001, two-sided Fisher's exact test). By contrast, BRAF mutations in melanomas on chronically sun-damaged skin (1 of 12 patients) and melanomas on skin relatively or completely unexposed to sun, such as palms, soles, subungual sites (6 of 39 patients), and mucosal membranes (2 of 21 patients) are rare. We found no association of mutation status with clinical outcome or with the presence of an associated melanocytic nevus. The mutated BRAF allele was frequently found at an elevated copy number, implicating BRAF as one of the factors driving selection for the frequent copy number increases of chromosome 7q in melanoma. In summary, the uneven distribution of BRAF mutations strongly suggests distinct genetic pathways leading to melanoma. The high mutation frequency in melanomas arising on intermittently sun-exposed skin suggests a complex causative role of such exposure that mandates further evaluation.
Keywords: signal transduction; mitogen activated protein kinase; adult; aged; middle aged; unclassified drug; major clinical study; somatic mutation; mutation; disease association; melanoma; cohort studies; skin defect; sun exposure; skin neoplasms; skin cancer; cohort analysis; gene frequency; protein serine threonine kinase; cancer invasion; pathological anatomy; cancer genetics; statistical significance; melanocytic nevus; oncogene proteins; outcomes research; ras protein; neoplasm invasiveness; fisher exact test; b raf kinase; sunlight; proto-oncogene proteins b-raf; skin carcinogenesis; chromosome 7q; genetic selection; mucosa; humans; human; male; female; priority journal; article; glabrous skin
Journal Title: JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume: 95
Issue: 24
ISSN: 0027-8874
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2003-12-17
Start Page: 1878
End Page: 1880
Language: English
PUBMED: 14679157
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djg123
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 12 September 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Klaus J Busam
    688 Busam