Abstract

Selenium has been shown to reduce cancer incidence in animal models and more recent data indicate that it may be protective in humans as well. However, little is known about the mechanism by which selenium prevents cancer. Cytosolic glutathione peroxidase (GPX1), a selenium-containing antioxidant enzyme, has been implicated in the development of cancer of the head and neck, lung, and breast, in part because of allelic loss at the GPX1 locus. The study of allelic loss at the GPX1 locus in colon cancer was investigated by examining loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in DNA extracted from both tumor and adjacent histopathologically normal tissue obtained by laser capture microdissection. Tissue samples were obtained from 53 colon cancer patients. Two highly polymorphic markers, alanine codon repeats and a proline-leucine polymorphism (198P/L) present in the GPX1 gene, were used to examine LOH at this locus. Analysis of both polymorphisms identified LOH at GPX1 in a significant percentage of colorectal cancer (42%). These results indicated that LOH at the GPX1 locus is a common event in cancer development and that GPX1 or other tightly linked genes may be involved in the etiology of this disease.

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