Adenocarcinoma of the stomach, the second most prevalent of all human malignancies world-wide, is associated with infection at an early age with Helicobacter pylori. Infection leads to several distinctive forms of gastritis, including chronic atrophic gastritis, which is a precursor of adenocarcinoma. H. hepaticus infection in mice constitutes the only other parallel association between a persistent bacterial infection and tumor development known to exist naturally. Study of the H. hepaticus syndrome of chronic active hepatitis and liver tumors in mice may yield insights into the role of H. pylori in human stomach cancer and gastric lymphoma.
The Harvey and Kirsten strains of murine sarcoma virus encode enzymatically and serologically related p21 src proteins which are required for virally mediated cellular transformation. The genes in each virus encoding p21 show such extensive divergence from each other that cloned probes from these genes detect distinct sets of cellular genes in the DNA from several vertebrate species. These data suggest that cellular p21 sarc genes constitute a divergent family of vertebrate genes that can regulate the growth of cells.
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