Europe PMC

This website requires cookies, and the limited processing of your personal data in order to function. By using the site you are agreeing to this as outlined in our privacy notice and cookie policy.

Abstract 


The pediatric eye-tumor retinoblastoma is widely held as a paradigm of human cancer genetics and has been a model system for both the two-hit hypothesis of dominantly inherited cancer as well as for the concept of tumor-specific loss of constitutional heterozygosity to achieve expression of the tumorigenic phenotype. Familial retinoblastoma is usually inherited as an autosomal dominant disease with high penetrance and expressivity. In a small but significant number of families, however, retinoblastoma is inherited with greatly reduced penetrance and expressivity. In these families, retinoblastoma tumors occur relatively late, are often unilateral, and unaffected carriers may exist. We have identified a mutation in such a family that exhibited extremely low penetrance and expressivity. This mutation appeared to affect splicing of the mutant allele such that both a normal length RB1 mRNA and a truncated RB1 mRNA were expressed from the same allele.

Citations & impact 


Impact metrics

Jump to Citations
Jump to Data

Citations of article over time

Article citations


Go to all (26) article citations

Data 


Similar Articles 


To arrive at the top five similar articles we use a word-weighted algorithm to compare words from the Title and Abstract of each citation.

Funding 


Funders who supported this work.

NCI NIH HHS (1)