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Featured researches published by Tina Bocker.


The Journal of Pathology | 1996

Genomic instability in colorectal carcinomas : Comparison of different evaluation methods and their biological significance

Tina Bocker; Jürgen Schlegel; Frank Kullmann; Gabriele Stumm; Hubert Zirngibl; Jörg T. Epplen; Josef Rüschoff

In order to demonstrate the relationship between microsatellite instability and other types of genomic instability, a series of 56 sporadic colorectal carcinomas was investigated by flow cytometrical ploidy analysis, oligonucleotide fingerprinting, and microsatellite polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Stabilization of the p53 gene product was analysed by immunohistochemistry and proliferative activity was determined flow cytometrically and by silver staining of nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs). Of the 56 carcinomas, 11 (19 per cent) exhibited microsatellite instability; 33 of the cases were aneuploid (59 per cent) and 29 (52 per cent) showed alterations of the oligonucleotide fingerprints. There was a significant correlation of microsatellite instability with localization of these tumours proximal to the splenic flexure, diploid DNA content, and less frequent p53 stabilization. A solid growth pattern, mucinous differentiation, and a Crohns‐like lymphoid infiltrate were also characteristic for those tumours. The results demonstrate for the first time a significantly lower proliferative activity in tumours with microsatellite instability. Data obtained from DNA flow cytometry or from oligonucleotide fingerprinting did not correlate with such tumour characteristics. It is proposed that the use of microsatellite PCR facilitates specifically the detection of a group of colorectal cancers which may differ in pathogenesis and perhaps prognosis.


Virchows Archiv | 1995

Microsatellite instability: new aspects in the carcinogenesis of colorectal carcinoma

Josef Rüschoff; Tina Bocker; J. Schlegel; Gabi Stumm; Ferdinand Hofstaedter

Very recently a new molecular mechanism in the tumorigenesis of colorectal carcinoma has been described which is closely linked to hereditary non-polyposis colonic cancer (HNPCC). Ubiquitous changes in the length of simple repetitive DNA sequences between constitutional and tumour DNA occur in about 90% of cases of HNPCC and in about 15% of cases of non-familial, sporadic colorectal carcinoma. Such microsatellite instabilities have been shown to be the phenotypical marker of mutations in the human homologues of prokaryotic mismatch repair genes (MutS, MutL, MutH). These data provide crucial new tools in the detection of patients at high risk of developing colon cancer and other HNPCC-related carcinomas. In addition, these developments provide new insights into a new, presumably primary event in oncogenesis, i.e. the occurrence of mutations in genomic stability genes leading to an increased cellular mutation rate (“mutator phenotype”) and thus to cancer.


Virchows Archiv | 1995

Detection of microsatellite instability in human colorectal carcinomas using a non-radioactive PCR-based screening technique

Jacqueline Schlegel; Tina Bocker; Ferdinand Hofstädter; Josef Rüschoff; H. Zirngabel

The aim of the present study was to establish a rapid, non-radioactive screening method for the detection of microsatellite instability (MIN). MIN is the primary characteristic of the mutator phenotype in tumours constituting hereditary non-polyposis colon cancers (HNPCC). We investigated 30 patients suffering from colorectal cancer using a non-radioactive PCR-based technique. MIN was present in 7 of 30 (23%) of the cases. There was a statistically significant correlation between MIN and localization of the tumour. Five of 7 (72%) tumours with MIN but only 4 of 23 (17%) tumours without MIN were localized in the proximal colon (P<0.01). There was a tendency to higher MIN frequency in tumours of patients with familial clustering of cancers. However, this was statistically not significant (P>0.05). In addition, no correlation between MIN and tumour grade and stage was found. For the investigations in the present study we used a non-radioactive PCR-based method followed by denaturating polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining. This method is highly sensitive and reproducible. Thus, PCR-based analysis using a non-radioactive staining technique represents a comprehensive tool for MIN screening in diagnostic pathology.


Gene | 1995

Indirect gene diagnoses for complex (multifactorial) diseases-A review

Jörg T. Epplen; Johannes Buitkamp; Tina Bocker; Cornelia Epplen

The analysis of multifactorial diseases requires the efficient investigation of large numbers of (gene) loci and patient (family) samples. Since simple repetitive DNA markers are dispersed all over the chromosomes, molecular techniques employing these tools render most conventional screening procedures obsolete. Examples of tumors, autoimmune diseases and infections are presented to validate concepts of indirect gene diagnoses via simple, tandemly arranged, repetitive DNA sequences. The salient advantages of microsatellite technologies vs. those of multilocus DNA fingerprinting are weighed.


Recent results in cancer research | 1996

Prognostic significance of molecular biological and immunohistological parameters in gastrointestinal carcinomas.

Josef Rüschoff; Tina Bocker; P. Vogel; Jürgen Schlegel

Histological type, malignancy grade, and tumor stage are among the most important parameters predicting outcome in cancer patients. Making use of immunocytochemistry as well as polymerase chain reaction-based techniques the demonstration of micrometastatic tumor spread, for example, into bone marrow, lymph nodes, and peritoneal cavity, is a new staging parameter of prognostic significance. In contrast, the prognostic value of different proliferation markers such as Ki67 (Mib 1), PCNA, and AgNOR has not yet been unequivocally established. A series of genetic change has been described in the development of cancer. In general, these changes seem to be of predictive value within defined tumor stages and it might be helpful to determine several genetic lesions within one tumor. Very recently a new mechanism of carcinogenesis closely related to the hereditary nonpolyposis cancer syndrome (HNPCC) was detected. Due to mutations in mismatch repair genes (hMSH 2, hMLH1, hPMS1,2) instabilities in simple repetitive genomic sequences occur, which are the genetic hallmark of most HNPCC tumors. This opens a new field to cancer prevention.


Cancer Research | 1997

Diagnostic Microsatellite Instability: Definition and Correlation with Mismatch Repair Protein Expression

Wolfgang Dietmaier; Sabine Wallinger; Tina Bocker; Frank Kullmann; Richard Fishel; Josef Rüschoff


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Aspirin suppresses the mutator phenotype associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer by genetic selection

Josef Rüschoff; Sabine Wallinger; Wolfgang Dietmaier; Tina Bocker; Gero Brockhoff; Ferdinand Hofstädter; Richard Fishel


Cancer Research | 1995

Comparative Genomic in Situ Hybridization of Colon Carcinomas with Replication Error

Jürgen Schlegel; Gabi Stumm; Harry Scherthan; Tina Bocker; Hubert Zirngibl; Josef Rüschoff; Ferdinand Hofstädter


American Journal of Pathology | 1997

Poorly differentiated colonic adenocarcinoma, medullary type: clinical, phenotypic, and molecular characteristics.

Josef Rüschoff; Wolfgang Dietmaier; J. Lüttges; G. Seitz; Tina Bocker; Hubert Zirngibl; Jacqueline Schlegel; Hans Konrad Schackert; Karl-Walter Jauch; Ferdinand Hofstaedter


Cancer Research | 1999

hMSH5 A Human MutS Homologue That Forms a Novel Heterodimer with hMSH4 and Is Expressed during Spermatogenesis

Tina Bocker; Alan Barusevicius; Tim Snowden; Shawn Guerrette; David J. Robbins; Carl J. Schmidt; John D. Burczak; Carlo M. Croce; Terry D. Copeland; Albert J. Kovatich; Richard Fishel

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Frank Kullmann

University of Regensburg

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Gabi Stumm

University of Regensburg

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