Fundic gland polyp (FGP) is the most common gastric polyp. It occurs sporadically or in association with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). FAP patients carry germline mutations of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene, and previous studies have revealed frequent somatic mutations of the APC gene in FGPs associated with FAP. Although inactivation of the APC gene contributes to histogenesis of FGPs associated with FAP, this rarely happens in sporadic cases. Loss of the APC gene promotes abnormal accumulation of beta-catenin, and mutation of GSK-3 beta phosphorylation sites in the beta-catenin gene can have a similar effect. To elucidate the contribution of beta-catenin gene mutation to the histogenesis of sporadic FGP, we analyzed beta-catenin gene mutation in exon 3 in 45 FGP lesions obtained from 35 patients. Somatic mutations were found in 29 lesions: 28 were missense mutations and one was an in-frame deletion. All of the missense mutations were confined to the former two serine residues of the GSK-3 beta phosphorylation sites and their flanking residues (codons 32, 33, 34, 37). Analysis in cases with multiple FGPs revealed a different mutation in each lesion, indicating their multicentric origin. Therefore, a significant proportion of sporadic FGPs have genetic alterations involving beta-catenin stabilization, as did FAP-associated FGPs.
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