| Literature DB >> 21603858 |
Wijden Mahfoudh1, Noureddine Bouaouina, Slim Ben Ahmed, Sallouha Gabbouj, Jingxuan Shan, Rebecca Mathew, Nancy Uhrhammer, Yves-Jean Bignon, Wafa Troudi, Amel Ben Ammar Elgaaied, Elham Hassen, Lotfi Chouchane.
Abstract
Germ-line mutations in BRCA1 breast cancer susceptibility gene account for a large proportion of hereditary breast cancer families and show considerable ethnic and geographical variations. The contribution of BRCA1 mutations to hereditary breast cancer has not yet been thoroughly investigated in Middle Eastern and North African populations. In this study, 16 Tunisian high-risk breast cancer families were screened for germline mutations in the entire BRCA1 coding region and exon-intron boundaries using direct sequencing. Six families were found to carry BRCA1 mutations with a prevalence of 37.5%. Four different deleterious mutations were detected. Three truncating mutations were previously described: c.798_799delTT (916 delTT), c.3331_3334delCAAG (3450 delCAAG), c.5266dupC (5382 insC) and one splice site mutation which seems to be specific to the Tunisian population: c.212 + 2insG (IVS5 + 2insG). We also identified 15 variants of unknown clinical significance. The c.798_799delTT mutation occurred at an 18% frequency and was shared by three apparently unrelated families. Analyzing five microsatellite markers in and flanking the BRCA1 locus showed a common haplotype associated with this mutation. This suggests that the c.798_799delTT mutation is a Tunisian founder mutation. Our findings indicate that the Tunisian population has a spectrum of prevalent BRCA1 mutations, some of which appear as recurrent and founding mutations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21603858 PMCID: PMC3249560 DOI: 10.1007/s11033-011-0829-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Rep ISSN: 0301-4851 Impact factor: 2.316
Families’ characteristics of our cohort
| Family ID | Sex of proband | Phenotype and age at diagnosis | Family history of breast and ovarian cancers and age at diagnosis | Family history of other cancers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | Female | Br30 | M Br 35, PC Br 35 | Leukemia |
| F2 | Female | Br 34 | S Br 20 | Leukaemia |
| F3 | Female | Br 34 | MA Br 45, MA Br ? | None |
| F4 | Female | Br 35 | MA Br 50, GM Br? | Brain |
| F5 | Female | Br 46 | S Br 42, M Br 65 | None |
| F7 | Female | Br 36 | S Br 40, M Br ?, GM Br 50 | None |
| F8 | Female | BBr 38 | M Br 38, S Br 43 | None |
| F9 | Female | Br 42 | S Br 35 | Prostate |
| F10 | Female | Br 34 | M Br33 | None |
| F11 | Female | Br 53 | S Br 40, S Br 60 | None |
| F12 | Female | Br 29 | S Br 39 | None |
| F13 | Female | Br 61 | S Br 28 | None |
| F14 | Female | Br 47 | S Br 35, N Br 30 | Cervical, liver |
| F15 | Female | Br 42 | M Br 40 | None |
| F16 | Female | Br35 | M Br?, MA Br? | Colon |
| F17 | Female | Br 49 | MA Br 52, MA Br 68, PC Br 42, PC Br 35, PC Ov 62 | Colon, Nasopharynx |
Br breast cancer, BBr bilateral breast cancer, OV ovarian cancer, M mother, S sister, GM grand-mother, MA maternal aunt, PC paternal cousin, N Niece
BRCA1 Germline mutations identified in a cohort of 16 breast cancer families from the middle coast of Tunisia
| Exon/intron | Systematic nomenclature | BIC traditional nomenclature | Amino acid change | Mutation type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deleterious mutations | ||||
| 11 | c798_799delTT | 916delTT | Stop285 | Frameshift |
| 11 | c3331_3334delCAAG | 3450delCAAG | Stop1115 | Frameshift |
| 20 | c.5266dupC | 5382insC | Stop1829 | Frameshift |
| 5 | c.212 + 2insG | IVS5 + 2insG | – | Splicing |
| Sequence variants of unknown significance | ||||
| 8 | c.442-58delT | IVS8-58delT | – | Intronic variant |
| 11 | c.1067 A > G | 1186A > G | Q356R | Missense |
| 11 | c.1456 T > C | 1575T > C | F486L | Missense |
| 11 | c.1648A > C | 1767A > C | N550H | Missense |
| 11 | c.2077 G > A | 2196G > A | D693N | Missense |
| 11 | c.2082C > T | 2201C > T | S694S | Silent |
| 11 | c.2311 T > C | 2430T > C | L771L | Silent |
| 11 | c.2529C > T | 2640C > T | R841W | Missense |
| 11 | c.2612C > T | 2731C > T | P871L | Missense |
| 11 | c.3113A > G | 3232A > G | E1038G | Missense |
| 11 | c.3119A > G | 3238A > G | S1040N | Missense |
| 11 | c.3548C > T | 3667A > G | K1183R | Missense |
| 13 | c.4308T > C | 4427T > C | S1436S | Silent |
| 16 | c.4837A > G | 4956A > G | S1613G | Missense |
| 18 | c.5117 G > C | 5236G > C | G1706A | Missense |
Fig. 1Pedigree of the family 8. Blackened circles indicate women affected with breast cancer. The proband was designed by an arrow. The index case, diagnosed with bilateral breast cancer at the age of 38 years, was a carrier of the c.798_799delTT mutation. In this family the mutation co-segregates with the disease and the same mutation was identified in the proband’s mother and sister diagnosed with breast cancer at ages 38 and 43, respectively