Abstract

Although human breast tumorigenesis is associated with the accumulation of mutations both in oncogenes and in tumor suppressor genes, the identity of the genetic alterations that are critical in the early stages of the breast tumorigenic process remains obscure. A high frequency (27–41%) of LOH occurrence has been shown at the <i>MET</i> locus on chromosome band 7q31 and this specific alteration is associated with poorer survival. Here, we report that RFLP analysis on 221 informative (heterozygous) primary breast tumors and 57 informative relapses (13 local recurrences and 44 distant metastases) revealed a similar frequency of 7q31 LOH as tumors progress from primary cancer to relapse, in marked contrast to other changes such as 11p15.5 LOH. This finding suggests that inactivation of a putative tumor suppressor gene located in 7q31 is a very early event in breast tumorigenesis. Our results also show that metastatic potential is an induced phenomenon that occurs at a relatively early stage, rather than a marker of tumor progression.

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