| Literature DB >> 18682749 |
George Zogopoulos1, Claus Jorgensen, Julinor Bacani, Alexandre Montpetit, Pierre Lepage, Vincent Ferretti, Lauren Chad, Subani Selvarajah, Brent Zanke, Thomas J Hudson, Tony Pawson, Steven Gallinger.
Abstract
Familial clustering of colorectal cancer occurs in 15-20% of cases, however recognized cancer syndromes explain only a small fraction of this disease. Thus, the genetic basis for the majority of hereditary colorectal cancer remains unknown. EPHB2 has recently been implicated as a candidate tumor suppressor gene in colorectal cancer. The aim of this study was to evaluate the contribution of EPHB2 to hereditary colorectal cancer. We screened for germline EPHB2 sequence variants in 116 population-based familial colorectal cancer cases by DNA sequencing. We then estimated the population frequencies and characterized the biological activities of the EPHB2 variants identified. Three novel nonsynonymous missense alterations were detected. Two of these variants (A438T and G787R) result in significant residue changes, while the third leads to a conservative substitution in the carboxy-terminal SAM domain (V945I). The former two variants were found once in the 116 cases, while the V945I variant was present in 2 cases. Genotyping of additional patients with colorectal cancer and control subjects revealed that A438T and G787R represent rare EPHB2 alleles. In vitro functional studies show that the G787R substitution, located in the kinase domain, causes impaired receptor kinase activity and is therefore pathogenic, whereas the A438T variant retains its receptor function and likely represents a neutral polymorphism. Tumor tissue from the G787R variant case manifested loss of heterozygosity, with loss of the wild-type allele, supporting a tumor suppressor role for EPHB2 in rare colorectal cancer cases. Rare germline EPHB2 variants may contribute to a small fraction of hereditary colorectal cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18682749 PMCID: PMC2483346 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Non-synonymous germline EPHB2 missense changes identified in familial and random colorectal cancer cases.
| Missense Change | Residue Substitution | Exon | Domain | Familial Colorectal Cancer Cases | Random Colorectal Cancer Cases | Control Subjects |
| nt. 1312 G→A | A438T | 6 | Extracellular Fibronectin TypeIII Domain | 1/116 | 0/364 | 0/384 |
| nt. 2035 G→A | D679N | 11 | Protein Kinase Domain | 3/116 | 11/1160 | 11/1133 |
| nt. 2359 G→A | G787R | 13 | Protein Kinase Domain | 1/116 | 0/182 | 0/199 |
| nt. 2833 G→A |
| 15 | SAM Domain | 2/116 | Not determined | Not determined |
A conservative residue substitution (V945I).
Figure 1Pedigrees of colorectal cancer cases carrying the A438T (Family 1, Panel A) and G787R (Family 1, Panel B) variants.
+/−, carrier; −/−, non-carrier; LOH+, Colorectal tumour tissue was found to manifest LOH, with loss of the wild-type allele; Ca, cancer.
Figure 2Sequencing results demonstrating loss of the wild-type EPHB2 allele in the G787R carrier. EPHB2 gene sequencing results of genomic DNA extracted from paired tumor and adjacent normal colon mucosa are shown.
Relative to the intensities of the guanine bands in the sequencing reaction, the intensity of the guanine nucleotide at position 2359 is substantially reduced in the tumor sample, suggesting loss of the wild type allele (G) in the tumor but not in the adjacent normal tissue (arrow shows nt. 2359).
Figure 3Biochemical characterization of EPHB2 variants.
Panel A: Diminished autophosphorylation of EPHB2 G787R variant in response to ephrinB1 stimulation. DU145 cells were transiently transfected with cDNA constructs (empty vector; wild-type, wt; A438T; G787R) and either left unstimulated (−) or stimulated (+) with preclustered ephrinB1-Fc for 30 min. EPHB2 was immunoprecipitated (IP) and immunoblotted (IB) with antiphosphotyrosine (4G10) to evaluate receptor autophosphorylation. The cell lysate was immunoblotted with antiEPHB2 to ascertain that there was equal transfection efficiency. Panel B: Abolished kinase activity of EPHB2 G787R variant. In vitro kinase assays were performed using wild-type EPHB2 or G787R immunoprecipitates and enolase as the exogenous substrate. Prior to imaging or immonoblotting against EPHB2, phosphorylated proteins were separated by gel electrophoresis and stained with coomassie. Autoradiogram showing 32PγATP incorporation in EPHB2 and enolase (upper panel), anti-EPHB2 immunoblot (middle panel) and equal loading of enolase is shown (lower panel). The table shows the relative kinase activity of the wild-type EPHB2 receptor (set to 100%) vs. the G787R variant.