Abstract

Twenty-three clinically silent prostatic carcinomas discovered in Japanese men at autopsy were surveyed for ras proto-oncogene mutations by mutation-specific oligonucleotide probe hybridization after polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification from a section of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Six of the 22 that were satisfactory amplified contained activating point mutations in codon 12 of K-ras, a significantly higher frequency than has been reported in patients with clinically advanced disease in the United States. Of the six cases with activating point mutations in codon 12 of K-ras, one had a GGT----GAT transition, four had GGT----GTT transversions, and one had both GGT----GAT and GGT----GTT mutations. Sections from the same tissues were immunohistochemically stained with an anti-ras p21 antibody. Carcinoma cells stained for ras p21 to some degree in 13 cases. Immunohistochemically detectable expression of p21 was always focal and was not necessarily associated with K-ras mutation. K-ras oncogene activation in prostatic carcinoma appears to merit additional study as a significant event in the pathogenesis of this neoplasm.

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