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Title: Cancer genes generated by rare chromosomal rearrangements rather than activation of oncogenes. Author: Duesberg PH. Journal: Med Oncol Tumor Pharmacother; 1987; 4(3-4):163-75. PubMed ID: 3326980. Abstract: The 20 known transforming onc genes of retroviruses are defined by sequences that are transduced from cellular genes, termed proto-oncogenes or cellular oncogenes. Based on these sequences, viral onc genes have been postulated to be transduced cellular cancer genes and proto-onc genes have been postulated to be latent cancer genes that can be activated from within the cell to cause virus-negative tumors. The hypothesis is popular because it promises direct access to cellular cancer genes. However, the existence of latent cancer genes presents a paradox since such genes are clearly undesirable. The hypothesis predicts (i) that viral onc genes and proto-onc genes are isogenic, (ii) that expression of proto-onc genes induces tumors, (iii) that activated proto-onc genes transform diploid cells upon transfection, like viral onc genes, and (iv) that diploid tumors exist that differ from normal cells only in transcriptionally or mutationally activated proto-onc genes. As yet, none of these predictions is confirmed. Moreover, the probability of spontaneous transformation in vivo is at least 10(9) times lower than predicted from the mechanisms thought to activate proto-onc genes. Therefore the hypothesis, that proto-onc genes are latent cellular oncogenes, appears to be an overinterpretation of sequence homology to structural and functional homology with viral onc genes. Here it is proposed that only rare truncations and illegitimate recombinations that alter the germline configuration of cellular genes, generate viral and possibly cellular cancer genes. The clonal chromosome abnormalities that are consistently found in tumor cells are microscopic evidence for rearrangements that may generate cancer genes. The clonality indicates that the tumors are initiated with, and possibly by, these abnormalities as predicted by Boveri in 1914 (Zur Frage der Entstehung maligner Tumoren, Jena, Fischer).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]