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Case Reports   |    
Calcaneal Osteosarcoma Associated with Werner Syndrome A Case Report with Mutation Analysis*
Yoshiro Tsuji, M.D.†; Katsuyuki Kusuzaki, M.D.‡; Kyoseki Kanemitsu, M.D.§; Takehisa Matsumoto, PH.D., D.V.M.#; Yuichi Ishikawa, M.D.**; Yasusuke Hirasawa, M.D.‡
View Disclosures and Other Information
Investigation performed at Yokaichi National Hospital, Shiga, Japan
*No benefits in any form have been received or will be received from a commercial party related directly or indirectly to the subject of this article. No funds were received in support of this study.
†Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seika National Health Insurance Hospital, 7 Sunakoda Hohzono, Seika-cho, Soraku-gun, Kyoto 619-0241, Japan.
‡Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, 465 Kajiicho, Kawaramachi-Hirokoji Street, Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto 602-0841, Japan.
§Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Yokaichi National Hospital, 255 Gochicho, Yokaichi, Shiga 527-8505, Japan.
#AGENE Research Institute, 200 Kajiwara, Kamakura, Kanagawa 247-0063, Japan.
**Department of Pathology, Cancer Institute, 1-37-1 Kami-ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo 170-8455, Japan.

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  2000; 82:1308-1308 
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In 1934, Oppenheimer and Kugel established the eponym of Werner syndrome13. This disease, which occurs with equal frequency in males and females, usually becomes manifest in the decade after adolescence, when previously normal development is altered by graying of the hair, impairment of normal growth, and loss of subcutaneous tissue and muscle mass in the extremities. The limbs become slender, and the trunk becomes disproportionately stocky. The shiny, atrophic, hyperkeratotic skin, unpadded by subcutaneous fat, is pulled tightly over the osseous prominences. Painful, circumscribed callosities occur, especially on the soles of the feet, and indolent ulcers appear in the regions of the malleoli of the ankles, the Achilles tendons, and the heels and toes. Baldness appears, and the hair thins in the regions of the eyebrows, face, axillae, and pubis. The facial appearance is often characteristically altered as the taut skin of the cheeks causes beaking of the nose, as shallow orbits and loss of periorbital connective tissue produce the appearance of proptosis, and as artificial lenses are required after the extraction of rapidly progressing cataracts. A peculiar thickening and vascularity of the vocal cords is associated with a weak, high-pitched voice. Arteriosclerosis is strikingly premature, and sexual underdevelopment results in sterility. Diabetes mellitus is common, and the skeleton is frequently affected by osteoporosis and hypertrophic arthritis. The fully developed syndrome creates a remarkably constant picture of premature senility, short stature, slender extremities, a stocky trunk, a beak-nosed face, and scleroderma-like changes14.
Patients who have Werner syndrome have been reported to be at high risk for the development of malignant lesions2,4,7. In addition, it has also been emphasized that neoplasms originating from mesenchymal tissue compose more than half of all malignant processes (such as leukemia, melanoma, and myelodysplastic syndrome) in patients with Werner syndrome; in the study by Goto et al., for example, such neoplasms were reported in 59 percent (110) of 186 patients6.
We report what we believe to be the tenth case of Werner syndrome associated with osteosarcoma in Japan. Mutation analysis was performed to confirm the clinical diagnosis12. Matsumoto et al. reported that 75 percent of alleles of Japanese patients who had Werner syndrome had one of three mutations: mutation 1 (a nonsense mutation), mutation 4 (an exon skip and frameshift mutation), or mutation 6 (a nonsense mutation)11.
 
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+Fig. 1:Radiographs of the left calcaneus. In 1991, the patient was diagnosed with osteoporosis (a) and was managed with bone-grafting at another institution (b). In 1996, when the patient was first seen by us, an ill defined osteolytic lesion with microcalcification was observed (c and d).
 
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+Fig. 2:Pedigree of the patient (arrow), showing that the patient's parents were consanguineous; the paternal grandfather was also the maternal grandfather, and the paternal and maternal grandmothers were siblings. This type of marriage is now avoided in Japan.
 
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 3:Photograph of the patient, demonstrating characteristic features of Werner syndrome, including alopecia, cataracts, a small and beak-shaped nose, and scleroderma-like skin changes.
 
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+Fig. 4:Magnetic resonance images showing the margins of an expansile lesion (arrows) in the calcaneus. The T1-weighted coronal magnetic resonance image (a) shows an interosseous low-signal-intensity tumor expanding into the calcaneus (repetition time, 450 milliseconds; echo time, fifteen milliseconds). The T2-weighted coronal (b) and sagittal (c) magnetic resonance images show that the tumor was composed of both low and high-signal-intensity areas (repetition time, 5500 milliseconds; echo time, 106 milliseconds).
 
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+Fig. 5:Photomicrograph showing malignant polygonal cells with osteoid formation. The tumor cells (arrows) had ovoid nuclei with conspicuous nucleoli and exhibited some degree of pleomorphism (hematoxylin and eosin, × 200; bar = twenty micrometers).
 
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+Fig. 6:Illustration depicting the principle of mutant allele-specific amplification. Polymerase chain reactions were performed in twenty-five microliters of 4 percent glycerin solution containing a mutant allele-specific primer, a common primer, and a normal allele (or a mutant allele). The conditions of the polymerase chain reactions were strictly set up so that the mutant allele was amplified at a high level and the efficiency of amplification of the normal allele was remarkably low.
 
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+Fig. 7:Agarose gel electrophoresis of polymerase chain reaction products amplified from the DNA of a healthy subject (lanes 1 and 2), a patient with Werner syndrome bearing mutation 6/6 (lanes 3 and 4), and the patient in the present study (lanes 5 and 6). Polymerase chain reaction was performed with use of a mutation 6-specific primer (lanes 1, 3, and 5) or a wild-type-specific primer (lanes 2, 4, and 6). The arrow indicates a 286-base-pair amplicon. Lane M contains a size marker (phi X174-Hae III digest).
A fifty-five-year-old woman came to Yokaichi National Hospital on August 13, 1996, with a chief complaint of pain in the left calcaneus. At the age of thirty-six years, the patient had undergone bilateral cataract extraction. At the age of fifty years, she had been admitted to another private hospital with a complaint of pain in the left calcaneus and was diagnosed with osteoporosis (Fig. 1, a). We believe that the pain was related to the onset of the tumor that was later diagnosed by us. Bone-grafting of the left calcaneus was performed for the treatment of osteoporosis (Fig. 1, b). The patient continued to have pain in the left foot until the time of presentation.
The family history revealed that the patient's younger brother had undergone bilateral cataract surgery at the age of forty years and had died of a malignant tumor at the age of fifty-two years. Her parents were consanguineous; her paternal grandfather was also her maternal grandfather, and her paternal and maternal grandmothers were siblings (Fig. 2).
Physical examination revealed that the patient was 139.4 centimeters tall and weighed 32.9 kilograms. She appeared much older than her stated age. The trunk was normally developed, but the extremities were slender. The scalp hair was white, sparse, and receding. The eyebrows, eyelashes, and axillary and pubic hair were white and sparse. The mouth was small, and the nose was small and beak-shaped. The skin of the face was shiny, thin, and taut (Fig. 3). There was little subcutaneous tissue, but the skin was moveable. There was atrophy of the skin, subcutaneous tissue, and muscles of the extremities. The bones of the feet were prominent, and the skin was stretched over them. Local heat, redness, and swelling were present in the region of the left calcaneus. The lungs were clear. The blood pressure was 102/54 millimeters of mercury (13.60/7.20 kilopascals) in the right arm and 126/60 millimeters of mercury (16.80/8.00 kilopascals) in the left arm. The pulse was eighty beats per minute, with regular rhythm. The heart was not enlarged, and there was no hepatosplenomegaly.
Urinalysis revealed a specific gravity of 1.015 and a pH of 5.5, and the test was negative for protein and sugar. Histological examination revealed occasional white blood cells, occasional red blood cells, and occasional epithelial cells.
The hematocrit was 42.8 percent, and the red blood-cell count was 4.36 × 106 per microliter (4.36 × 1012 per liter). The hemoglobin level was 13.4 grams per deciliter (8.3 millimoles per liter), with a mean corpuscular volume of 98.2 cubic micrometers, a mean corpuscular hemoglobin of 30.7 picograms, and a mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration of 31.3 percent. The white blood-cell count was 4.4 × 109 per liter, with a normal differential. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was thirty-six millimeters per hour. The platelet count was 21.1 × 104 per microliter (211 × 109 per liter). The serum potassium level was 4.0 milliequivalents per liter (4.0 millimoles per liter), the serum chloride level was 102 milliequivalents per liter (102 millimoles per liter), and the serum sodium level was 143 milliequivalents per liter (143 millimoles per liter). The total protein level was 8.4 grams per deciliter (84.0 grams per liter), and the albumin-to-globulin ratio was 1.56. The serum alkaline phosphatase level was 397 international units per liter (normal, 109 to 344 international units per liter), the serum total cholesterol level was 207 milligrams per deciliter (5.35 millimoles per liter), the triglyceride level was 132 milligrams per deciliter (1.49 millimoles per liter), the blood urea nitrogen level was 22.0 milligrams per deciliter (7.9 millimoles per liter), and the C-reactive protein level was 0.0 milligrams per deciliter (0.0 milligrams per liter). The twenty-four-hour urinary excretion rate of 17-ketosteroids was 2.0 milligrams per day (7.0 micromoles per day) (volume, 600 milliliters), and a serological test for syphilis was negative. A glucose tolerance test revealed that the blood sugar level was 101 milligrams per deciliter (5.6 millimoles per liter) (normal, seventy to 110 milligrams per deciliter [3.9 to 6.1 millimoles per liter]) at the beginning of fasting, 139 milligrams per deciliter (7.7 millimoles per liter) at one-half hour, 146 milligrams per deciliter (8.1 millimoles per liter) at one hour, 141 milligrams per deciliter (7.8 millimoles per liter) at one and one-half hours, and 134 milligrams per deciliter (7.4 millimoles per liter) at two hours. All laboratory data, with the exception of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, the alkaline phosphatase level, and the results of the glucose tolerance test, were normal. The patient was diagnosed as having diabetes mellitus.
An electrocardiogram revealed normal findings. Radiographs of the chest revealed normal findings except for moderate calcification of the aorta.
Radiographs of the calcanei revealed marked calcification of the Achilles tendon bilaterally. The left calcaneus had a solitary osteolytic lesion in the marrow cavity, with cortical destruction. There was no sclerotic rim around the lesion, and no cortical expansion was observed. Microcalcification was present in the bone marrow (Fig. 1, c and d). Bone scintigraphy with technetium-99m methylene diphosphonate showed uptake of tracer in the left calcaneus. T1-weighted coronal magnetic resonance images revealed an interosseous area of low signal intensity, consistent with an expansile lesion in the calcaneus and the overlying cortex (Fig. 4, a). T2-weighted coronal and sagittal magnetic resonance images showed a high-signal-intensity lesion with regions of high contrast that represented necrosis and hemorrhage (Fig. 4, b and c). Computerized tomography scans revealed a pathological fracture of the calcaneus.
We diagnosed this lesion as a bone tumor. A biopsy was performed on December 4, 1996, to determine whether the tumor was benign or malignant. Histological evaluation of the biopsy specimen revealed irregularly shaped regions of partially calcified osteoid formation associated with solid growth of tumor cells and occasional tumorous cartilage. The tumor cells had ovoid nuclei with conspicuous nucleoli and exhibited some degree of pleomorphism (Fig. 5). The diagnosis of osteoblastic osteosarcoma was made on January 11, 1997. A left below-the-knee amputation was performed on February 5, 1997.
Mutation analysis according to the mutant allele-specific amplification method with use of peripheral blood leukocytes was carried out as previously described (Fig. 6)10,11. With this method, specimens of DNA are obtained from skin fibroblasts, B-lymphoblastoid cells cultured in the laboratory, or heparinized whole blood. In the present study, we used whole blood cells. The blood samples were first diluted eightfold with sucrose-Triton solution containing 0.32-molar sucrose, ten-millimolar Tris-hydrochloric acid (pH 7.5), five-millimolar magnesium chloride, and 1 percent Triton X-100. Samples were placed on ice for twenty minutes and then centrifuged at 1000 times gravity for ten minutes to pellet the cell nuclei. The pellet was resuspended and incubated at 37 degrees Celsius overnight in 2.5 milliliters of lysis solution containing 67.5-millimolar sodium chloride, 22.5-millimolar EDTA, 0.5 percent sodium dodecyl sulfate, and proteinase K (0.2 milligram per milliliter). The mixture was treated with a combination of phenol, chloroform, and isoamyl alcohol (in a ratio of 50:48:2 by volume), and the aqueous layer was extracted from the lysate. Finally, genomic DNA was precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in a solution of ten-millimolar Tris-hydrochloric acid (pH 8.0) and 0.2-millimolar EDTA. Polymerase chain reaction primers (Sawaday Technology, Tokyo, Japan) were purchased, oligonucleotide primers specific to wild-type alleles or mutant alleles were designed, and the optimal temperature of annealing for each set of primers was determined with use of the OLIGO primer analysis software program (Lifescience Software Resource, Long Lake, Minnesota). Polymerase chain reaction was performed in twenty-five microliters of 4 percent glycerin solution containing Taq polymerase (Perkin-Elmer Biosystems, Foster City, California), ten picomoles of mutant allele-specific primer (or wild-type allele-specific primer), ten picomoles of a common primer, and twenty-five to fifty nanograms of genomic DNA as a template. The polymerase chain reaction products were separated by electrophoresis in a 3 percent gel made of Agarose L 03 TAKARA (Takara, Tokyo, Japan). In the present study, three sets of primers (one each for mutations 1, 4, and 6) were applied and the amplification of mutation 6 was detected (Fig. 7), implying that the patient was homozygous for this type of mutation (designated as mutation 6/6 according to Matsumoto et al.11,12).
In 1904, Otto Werner described four siblings who had premature aging, cataracts, and skin disorders15. In 1934, Oppenheimer and Kugel established the eponym of Werner syndrome13. Since then, more than 1000 cases have been reported. Werner syndrome has been frequently associated with malignancy2,4,7. The patient in the present report had an unusual body habitus (short stature and a stocky trunk with spindly limbs), signs of premature senescence (gray hair, cataracts, osteoporosis, and arteriosclerosis), and scleroderma-like skin changes, all of which are consistent with Werner syndrome6.
The locus of Werner syndrome was recently mapped to chromosome 8 (8p11-12)5, and the gene responsible (known as WRN) was identified by positional cloning16. WRN encodes a protein, 1432 amino acids long, that is homologous to the RecQ-type DNA helicase. Nineteen different mutations of Werner syndrome have been found9; mutations 4 and 6 are major mutations in Japan. To our knowledge, we are the first to report the case of a patient with Werner syndrome and osteosarcoma whose diagnosis was confirmed by mutation analysis. As 75 percent of alleles of Japanese patients with Werner syndrome are explained by only three types of mutations, determining the diagnosis on the basis of genetic mutations is relatively easy. Our patient exhibited mutation 6/6. Mutation 6 is predicted to produce a truncated protein that lacks enzymatic activity, culminating in the loss of Werner syndrome helicase function. A possible genotype-phenotype relationship regarding the cell lines of thyroid carcinomas has been noted (one mutation seems to be associated with follicular thyroid carcinoma and another, with papillary thyroid carcinoma)9, but a thorough clinical evaluation has failed thus far to reveal any difference in symptoms among patients with different mutations11.
The tumor in our patient was different from conventional osteosarcoma in that it affected the calcaneus and was diagnosed when the patient was fifty-five years old (and not younger). However, this lesion demonstrated the typical characteristics of osteosarcoma arising in patients with Werner syndrome; as reported previously8, the average age of patients who have osteosarcoma in association with Werner syndrome is forty years and the lesion affects sites that are atypical for osteosarcoma.
The cause of the malignancy complicating Werner syndrome is not well known. Boyd and Grant proposed that premature aging of all organ systems might be the cause of the high prevalence of malignant tumors in elderly individuals1. This hypothesis was supported by the finding that skin fibroblasts from a patient with Werner syndrome lived only one-third or one-eighth as long as normal skin fibroblasts10, and that, in vitro, the DNA replication rate was slower in fibroblasts from a patient with Werner syndrome3. However, Goto et al. showed that Werner syndrome was not only a premature aging disease but also a cancer syndrome, as the malignant tumors seen in patients who had Werner syndrome were different from those seen in patients who did not have Werner syndrome with respect to site, histological type, and age at onset6. Specifically, Goto et al. reported that (1) the rate of occurrence of nonepithelial tumors was ten times the usual rate, (2) nonepithelial tumors included bone and soft-tissue tumors, melanoma, leukemia, and myelodysplastic syndrome, (3) gastrointestinal cancer, lung cancer, and prostate cancer were rare, whereas thyroid cancer was frequent9, and (4) meningioma was frequent6. Thus, additional genetic analyses should be done to determine why Werner syndrome is associated with malignant tumors.
Previously, Werner syndrome was diagnosed on the basis of clinical findings only. To our knowledge, we are the first to confirm the diagnosis of Werner syndrome associated with calcaneal osteosarcoma with use of mutant allele-specific amplification.
Boyd, M. W. J., and Grant, A. P.: Werner's syndrome (progeria of the adult): further pathological and biochemical observations. British Med. J.,2: 920-924, 1959.2920  1959 
 
Epstein, C. J.; Martin, G. M.; Schultz, A. L.; and Motulsky, A. G.: Werner's syndrome. A review of its symptomatology, natural history, pathologic features, genetics and relationship to the natural aging process. Medicine,45: 177-221, 1966.45177  1966  [PubMed]
 
Fujiwara, Y.; Higashikawa, T.; and Tatsumi, M.: A retarded rate of DNA replication and normal level of DNA repair in Werner's syndrome fibroblasts in culture. J. Cell. Physiol.,92: 365-374, 1977.92365  1977  [PubMed]
 
Goto, M.; Tanimoto, K.; Horiuchi, Y.; and Sasazuki, T.: Family analysis of Werner's syndrome: a survey of 42 Japanese families with a review of the literature. Clin. Genet.,,19: 8-15, 1981.198  1981 
 
Goto, M.; Rubenstein, M.; Weber, J.; Woods, K.; and Drayna, D.: Genetic linkage of Werner's syndrome to five markers on chromosome 8. Nature,355: 735-738, 1992.355735  1992  [PubMed]
 
Goto, M.; Miller, R. W.; Ishikawa, Y.; and Sugano, H.: Excess of rare cancers in Werner syndrome (adult progeria). Cancer Epidemiol., Biomark. and Prev.,5: 239-246, 1996.5239  1996 
 
Goto, M.: Hierarchical deterioration of body systems in Werner's syndrome: implications for normal ageing. Mech. Ageing and Devel.,98: 239-254, 1997.98239  1997 
 
Ishikawa, Y.; Nishida, K.; Sugano, H.; Kitagawa, T.; Kawaguchi, N.; Machinami, R.; Miller, R. W.; and Goto, M.: [Pathological study on 9 cases of osteosarcoma arising in Werner's syndrome] [abstract]. J. Japanese Orthop. Assn.,70: 1042, 1996.701042  1996 
 
Ishikawa, Y.; Sugano, H.; Matsumoto, T.; Furuichi, Y.; Miller, R. W.; and Goto, M.: Unusual features of thyroid carcinomas in Japanese with Werner syndrome and possible genotype-phenotype relations to cell type and race. Cancer,85: 1345-1352, 1999.851345  1999  [PubMed]
 
Martin, G. M.; Sprague, C. A.; and Epstein, C. J.: Replicative life-span of cultivated human cells. Effects of donor's age, tissue and genotype. Lab. Invest.,23: 86-92, 1970.2386  1970  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto, T.; Imamura, O.; Yamabe, Y.; Kuromitsu, J.; Tokutake, Y.; Shimamoto, A.; Suzuki, N.; Satoh, M.; Kitao, S.; Ichikawa, K.; Kataoka, H.; Sugawara, K.; Thomas, W.; Mason, B.; Tsuchihashi, Z.; Drayna, D.; Sugawara, M.; Sugimoto, M.; Furuichi, Y.; and Goto, M.: Mutation and haplotype analyses of the Werner's syndrome gene based on its genomic structure: genetic epidemiology in the Japanese population. Human Genet.,100: 123-130, 1997.100123  1997 
 
Matsumoto, T.; Tsuchihashi, Z.; Ito, C.; Fujita, K.; Goto, M.; and Furuichi, Y.: Genetic diagnosis of Werner's syndrome, a premature aging disease, by mutant allele specific amplification (MASA) and oligomer ligation assay (OLA). J. Anti-Aging Med.,1: 131-140, 1998.1131  1998 
 
Oppenheimer, B. S., and Kugel, V. H.: Werner's syndrome. A heredofamilial disorder with scleroderma, bilateral juvenile cataract, precocious graying of the hair and endocrine stigmatization. Trans. Assn. Am. Phys.,49: 358-370, 1934.49358  1934 
 
Perloff, J. K., and Phelops, E. T.: A review of Werner's syndrome with a report of the second autopsied case. Ann. Intern. Med.,48: 1205-1220, 1958.481205  1958  [PubMed]
 
Werner, O.: Ueber Kataract in Vervindung mit Sklerodermie. Doctoral dissertation, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany, 1904. 
 
Yu, C. E.; Oshima, J.; Fu, Y. H.; Wijsman, E. M.; Hisama, F.; Alisch, R.; Matthews, S.; Nakura, J.; Miki, T.; Ouais, S.; Martin, G. M.; Mulligan, J.; and Schellenberg, G. D.: Positional cloning of the Werner's syndrome gene. Science,272: 258-262, 1996.272258  1996  [PubMed]
 

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+Fig. 1:Radiographs of the left calcaneus. In 1991, the patient was diagnosed with osteoporosis (a) and was managed with bone-grafting at another institution (b). In 1996, when the patient was first seen by us, an ill defined osteolytic lesion with microcalcification was observed (c and d).
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 2:Pedigree of the patient (arrow), showing that the patient's parents were consanguineous; the paternal grandfather was also the maternal grandfather, and the paternal and maternal grandmothers were siblings. This type of marriage is now avoided in Japan.
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 3:Photograph of the patient, demonstrating characteristic features of Werner syndrome, including alopecia, cataracts, a small and beak-shaped nose, and scleroderma-like skin changes.
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 4:Magnetic resonance images showing the margins of an expansile lesion (arrows) in the calcaneus. The T1-weighted coronal magnetic resonance image (a) shows an interosseous low-signal-intensity tumor expanding into the calcaneus (repetition time, 450 milliseconds; echo time, fifteen milliseconds). The T2-weighted coronal (b) and sagittal (c) magnetic resonance images show that the tumor was composed of both low and high-signal-intensity areas (repetition time, 5500 milliseconds; echo time, 106 milliseconds).
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 5:Photomicrograph showing malignant polygonal cells with osteoid formation. The tumor cells (arrows) had ovoid nuclei with conspicuous nucleoli and exhibited some degree of pleomorphism (hematoxylin and eosin, × 200; bar = twenty micrometers).
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 6:Illustration depicting the principle of mutant allele-specific amplification. Polymerase chain reactions were performed in twenty-five microliters of 4 percent glycerin solution containing a mutant allele-specific primer, a common primer, and a normal allele (or a mutant allele). The conditions of the polymerase chain reactions were strictly set up so that the mutant allele was amplified at a high level and the efficiency of amplification of the normal allele was remarkably low.
Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
+Fig. 7:Agarose gel electrophoresis of polymerase chain reaction products amplified from the DNA of a healthy subject (lanes 1 and 2), a patient with Werner syndrome bearing mutation 6/6 (lanes 3 and 4), and the patient in the present study (lanes 5 and 6). Polymerase chain reaction was performed with use of a mutation 6-specific primer (lanes 1, 3, and 5) or a wild-type-specific primer (lanes 2, 4, and 6). The arrow indicates a 286-base-pair amplicon. Lane M contains a size marker (phi X174-Hae III digest).
Boyd, M. W. J., and Grant, A. P.: Werner's syndrome (progeria of the adult): further pathological and biochemical observations. British Med. J.,2: 920-924, 1959.2920  1959 
 
Epstein, C. J.; Martin, G. M.; Schultz, A. L.; and Motulsky, A. G.: Werner's syndrome. A review of its symptomatology, natural history, pathologic features, genetics and relationship to the natural aging process. Medicine,45: 177-221, 1966.45177  1966  [PubMed]
 
Fujiwara, Y.; Higashikawa, T.; and Tatsumi, M.: A retarded rate of DNA replication and normal level of DNA repair in Werner's syndrome fibroblasts in culture. J. Cell. Physiol.,92: 365-374, 1977.92365  1977  [PubMed]
 
Goto, M.; Tanimoto, K.; Horiuchi, Y.; and Sasazuki, T.: Family analysis of Werner's syndrome: a survey of 42 Japanese families with a review of the literature. Clin. Genet.,,19: 8-15, 1981.198  1981 
 
Goto, M.; Rubenstein, M.; Weber, J.; Woods, K.; and Drayna, D.: Genetic linkage of Werner's syndrome to five markers on chromosome 8. Nature,355: 735-738, 1992.355735  1992  [PubMed]
 
Goto, M.; Miller, R. W.; Ishikawa, Y.; and Sugano, H.: Excess of rare cancers in Werner syndrome (adult progeria). Cancer Epidemiol., Biomark. and Prev.,5: 239-246, 1996.5239  1996 
 
Goto, M.: Hierarchical deterioration of body systems in Werner's syndrome: implications for normal ageing. Mech. Ageing and Devel.,98: 239-254, 1997.98239  1997 
 
Ishikawa, Y.; Nishida, K.; Sugano, H.; Kitagawa, T.; Kawaguchi, N.; Machinami, R.; Miller, R. W.; and Goto, M.: [Pathological study on 9 cases of osteosarcoma arising in Werner's syndrome] [abstract]. J. Japanese Orthop. Assn.,70: 1042, 1996.701042  1996 
 
Ishikawa, Y.; Sugano, H.; Matsumoto, T.; Furuichi, Y.; Miller, R. W.; and Goto, M.: Unusual features of thyroid carcinomas in Japanese with Werner syndrome and possible genotype-phenotype relations to cell type and race. Cancer,85: 1345-1352, 1999.851345  1999  [PubMed]
 
Martin, G. M.; Sprague, C. A.; and Epstein, C. J.: Replicative life-span of cultivated human cells. Effects of donor's age, tissue and genotype. Lab. Invest.,23: 86-92, 1970.2386  1970  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto, T.; Imamura, O.; Yamabe, Y.; Kuromitsu, J.; Tokutake, Y.; Shimamoto, A.; Suzuki, N.; Satoh, M.; Kitao, S.; Ichikawa, K.; Kataoka, H.; Sugawara, K.; Thomas, W.; Mason, B.; Tsuchihashi, Z.; Drayna, D.; Sugawara, M.; Sugimoto, M.; Furuichi, Y.; and Goto, M.: Mutation and haplotype analyses of the Werner's syndrome gene based on its genomic structure: genetic epidemiology in the Japanese population. Human Genet.,100: 123-130, 1997.100123  1997 
 
Matsumoto, T.; Tsuchihashi, Z.; Ito, C.; Fujita, K.; Goto, M.; and Furuichi, Y.: Genetic diagnosis of Werner's syndrome, a premature aging disease, by mutant allele specific amplification (MASA) and oligomer ligation assay (OLA). J. Anti-Aging Med.,1: 131-140, 1998.1131  1998 
 
Oppenheimer, B. S., and Kugel, V. H.: Werner's syndrome. A heredofamilial disorder with scleroderma, bilateral juvenile cataract, precocious graying of the hair and endocrine stigmatization. Trans. Assn. Am. Phys.,49: 358-370, 1934.49358  1934 
 
Perloff, J. K., and Phelops, E. T.: A review of Werner's syndrome with a report of the second autopsied case. Ann. Intern. Med.,48: 1205-1220, 1958.481205  1958  [PubMed]
 
Werner, O.: Ueber Kataract in Vervindung mit Sklerodermie. Doctoral dissertation, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany, 1904. 
 
Yu, C. E.; Oshima, J.; Fu, Y. H.; Wijsman, E. M.; Hisama, F.; Alisch, R.; Matthews, S.; Nakura, J.; Miki, T.; Ouais, S.; Martin, G. M.; Mulligan, J.; and Schellenberg, G. D.: Positional cloning of the Werner's syndrome gene. Science,272: 258-262, 1996.272258  1996  [PubMed]
 
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