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Discovery of mutations in homologous recombination genes in African-American women with breast cancer
被引:0
|作者:
Yuan Chun Ding
Aaron W. Adamson
Linda Steele
Adam M. Bailis
Esther M. John
Gail Tomlinson
Susan L. Neuhausen
机构:
[1] Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope,Department of Population Sciences
[2] Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope,Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
[3] Cancer Prevention Institute of California,Department of Health Research & Policy (Epidemiology), and Stanford Cancer Institute
[4] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Pediatrics
[5] University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio,Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research
[6] University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,undefined
来源:
关键词:
Homologous recombination;
Germline mutations;
Breast cancer;
African-Americans;
Loss of protein function;
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学科分类号:
摘要:
African-American women are more likely to develop aggressive breast cancer at younger ages and experience poorer cancer prognoses than non-Hispanic Caucasians. Deficiency in repair of DNA by homologous recombination (HR) is associated with cancer development, suggesting that mutations in genes that affect this process may cause breast cancer. Inherited pathogenic mutations have been identified in genes involved in repairing DNA damage, but few studies have focused on African-Americans. We screened for germline mutations in seven HR repair pathway genes in DNA of 181 African-American women with breast cancer, evaluated the potential effects of identified missense variants using in silico prediction software, and functionally characterized a set of missense variants by yeast two-hybrid assays. We identified five likely-damaging variants, including two PALB2 truncating variants (Q151X and W1038X) and three novel missense variants (RAD51C C135R, and XRCC3 L297P and V337E) that abolish protein–protein interactions in yeast two-hybrid assays. Our results add to evidence that HR gene mutations account for a proportion of the genetic risk for developing breast cancer in African-Americans. Identifying additional mutations that diminish HR may provide a tool for better assessing breast cancer risk and improving approaches for targeted treatment.
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页码:187 / 195
页数:8
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