PURPOSE: Mutations in the BRCA2 gene are dominantly inherited but cause cancers when the wild-type allele has loss of heterozygosity (LOH) within the cancer. Because most disease-associated BRCA2 mutations are protein-truncating mutations, a test for truncated BRCA2 proteins should identify most BRCA2 hereditary cancers. METHODS: We have developed a tissue truncation test to identify truncated BRCA2 proteins in breast cancer tissue biopsies in vivo that does not use amplification or genetic manipulations. N-terminal and C-terminal antibodies are used to visualize protein truncation by demonstrating that the beginning of the protein is present but the end (ie, terminus) is absent. RESULTS: A quantitative C-terminal immunostaining score or a C-terminal to N-terminal truncation ratio correctly classified 20 of 21 breast cancers arising in BRCA2 mutation carriers and 57 of 58 cancers arising outside the context of a multiple-case breast cancer family. This represents a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 98%. Because of the presence of C-terminal BRCA2 protein and atypical clinical features of the misclassified cancer in a BRCA2 mutation carrier, we performed polymerase chain reaction and sequence analyses on this cancer. The results showed continued presence of the BRCA2 wild-type allele in the cancer, which indicated that intact BRCA2 protein was present in this cancer. CONCLUSION: This immunohistochemistry-based test (which takes only 4 hours) appears to identify BRCA2 hereditary cancer with high accuracy. The test also appears to diagnose the biochemical loss of BRCA2 protein in cancers (ie, BRCA2-mutant genotype), which will usually but not always agree with the presence of a germline BRCA2 mutation found by susceptibility testing by DNA sequencing of blood samples.
PURPOSE: Mutations in the BRCA2 gene are dominantly inherited but cause cancers when the wild-type allele has loss of heterozygosity (LOH) within the cancer. Because most disease-associated BRCA2 mutations are protein-truncating mutations, a test for truncated BRCA2 proteins should identify most BRCA2hereditary cancers. METHODS: We have developed a tissue truncation test to identify truncated BRCA2 proteins in breast cancer tissue biopsies in vivo that does not use amplification or genetic manipulations. N-terminal and C-terminal antibodies are used to visualize protein truncation by demonstrating that the beginning of the protein is present but the end (ie, terminus) is absent. RESULTS: A quantitative C-terminal immunostaining score or a C-terminal to N-terminal truncation ratio correctly classified 20 of 21 breast cancers arising in BRCA2 mutation carriers and 57 of 58 cancers arising outside the context of a multiple-case breast cancer family. This represents a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 98%. Because of the presence of C-terminal BRCA2 protein and atypical clinical features of the misclassified cancer in a BRCA2 mutation carrier, we performed polymerase chain reaction and sequence analyses on this cancer. The results showed continued presence of the BRCA2 wild-type allele in the cancer, which indicated that intact BRCA2 protein was present in this cancer. CONCLUSION: This immunohistochemistry-based test (which takes only 4 hours) appears to identify BRCA2hereditary cancer with high accuracy. The test also appears to diagnose the biochemical loss of BRCA2 protein in cancers (ie, BRCA2-mutant genotype), which will usually but not always agree with the presence of a germline BRCA2 mutation found by susceptibility testing by DNA sequencing of blood samples.
Authors: S Mazoyer; A M Dunning; O Serova; J Dearden; N Puget; C S Healey; S A Gayther; J Mangion; M R Stratton; H T Lynch; D E Goldgar; B A Ponder; G M Lenoir Journal: Nat Genet Date: 1996-11 Impact factor: 38.330
Authors: Timothy R Rebbeck; Henry T Lynch; Susan L Neuhausen; Steven A Narod; Laura Van't Veer; Judy E Garber; Gareth Evans; Claudine Isaacs; Mary B Daly; Ellen Matloff; Olufunmilayo I Olopade; Barbara L Weber Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2002-05-20 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: J M Lancaster; R Wooster; J Mangion; C M Phelan; C Cochran; C Gumbs; S Seal; R Barfoot; N Collins; G Bignell; S Patel; R Hamoudi; C Larsson; R W Wiseman; A Berchuck; J D Iglehart; J R Marks; A Ashworth; M R Stratton; P A Futreal Journal: Nat Genet Date: 1996-06 Impact factor: 38.330
Authors: N Collins; R McManus; R Wooster; J Mangion; S Seal; S R Lakhani; W Ormiston; P A Daly; D Ford; D F Easton Journal: Oncogene Date: 1995-04-20 Impact factor: 9.867
Authors: Samuel F Gilbert; Amr S Soliman; Mehdi Karkouri; Meaghen Quinlan-Davidson; Ashley Strahley; Mohab Eissa; Subhojit Dey; Ahmed Hablas; Ibrahim A Seifeldin; Mohamed Ramadan; Noureddine Benjaafar; Kathy Toy; Sofia D Merajver Journal: Breast Dis Date: 2011
Authors: Jason C Hall; Laura A Marlow; Adam C Mathias; Louis K Dawson; William F Durham; Kenneth A Meshaw; Robert J Mullin; Aidan J Synnott; Daniel L Small; Murli Krishna; Daniel von Hoff; Julia Schüler; Steven N Hart; Fergus J Couch; Gerardo Colon-Otero; John A Copland Journal: J Transl Med Date: 2016-05-10 Impact factor: 5.531