Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9126861 | Gene | 2005 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Ewing tumors, which comprise Ewing's sarcoma and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors, are highly aggressive and mostly affect children and adolescents. Their molecular signature is a chromosomal translocation leading to the generation of EWS-ETS (or very rarely FUS-ETS) fusion proteins that are capable of transforming cells. These oncoproteins act as aberrant transcription factors due to the fusion of an ETS DNA binding domain to a highly potent EWS (or FUS) transactivation domain. Accordingly, many EWS-ETS target genes have been identified whose dysregulation could contribute to the development of tumor formation. Furthermore, EWS-ETS oncoproteins may impact on RNA splicing or affect other proteins through disturbing their ability to form functional complexes. The molecular knowledge gained so far from studying EWS-ETS oncoproteins has not only broadened our understanding of Ewing tumors but also improved the diagnosis of these highly undifferentiated tumors. In addition, several potential prognostic markers have been uncovered and novel therapies are suggested that may improve the still dismal survival rate of Ewing tumor patients.
Keywords
EWSE26 transformation-specificTGF-βAMLER81E1AFEtv1ETS-related genePea3Fli1Etv4CCND1IGFBP-3EWSR1PDGFIGF-1TLSERGMMPETsFUshTERTtranslocated in liposarcomainsulin-like growth factor-1chromatin immunoprecipitationtransforming growth factor-βhuman telomerase reverse transcriptaseGene transcriptionCancerVascular endothelial growth factorVascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF)platelet-derived growth factorFevacute myeloid leukemiamatrix metalloproteinaseTAFInsulin-like growth factor binding protein-3RNA splicingCHiP
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Genetics
Authors
Ralf Janknecht,