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    Lancet. 1994 Jan 8;343(8889):86-7.

    p53 mutation hotspot in radon-associated lung cancer.

    Taylor JA, Watson MA, Devereux TR, Michels RY, Saccomanno G, Anderson M.

    Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.

    Comment in:

    Mutations in gene p53 are the most common defects in lung cancer and may be a pathway through which environmental carcinogens initiate cancer. We investigated p53 mutations in lung cancers from uranium miners with high radon exposure. 16 (31%) of 52 large-cell and squamous-cell cancers from miners contained the same AGG to ATG transversion at codon 249, including cancers from 3 or 5 miners who had never smoked. This specific mutation has been reported in only 1 of 241 published p53 mutations from lung cancers. The codon 249 mutation may be a marker for radon-induced lung cancer.

    PMID: 7903781 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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