| Literature DB >> 29105096 |
Robbert DA Weren1, Marjolijn Jl Ligtenberg1,2, Ad Geurts van Kessel1, Richarda M De Voer1, Nicoline Hoogerbrugge1, Roland P Kuiper1.
Abstract
It is now well established that germline genomic aberrations can underlie high-penetrant familial polyposis and colorectal cancer syndromes, but a genetic cause has not yet been found for the major proportion of patients with polyposis. Since next-generation sequencing has become widely accessible, several novel, but rare, high-penetrant risk factors for adenomatous polyposis have been identified, all operating in pathways responsible for genomic maintenance and DNA repair. One of these is the base excision repair pathway. In addition to the well-established role of the DNA glycosylase gene MUTYH, biallelic mutations in which predispose to MUTYH-associated polyposis, a second DNA glycosylase gene, NTHL1, has recently been associated with adenomatous polyposis and a high colorectal cancer risk. Both recessive polyposis syndromes are associated with increased risks for several other cancer types as well, but the spectrum of benign and malignant tumours in individuals with biallelic NTHL1 mutations was shown to be broader; hence the name NTHL1-associated tumour syndrome. Colorectal tumours encountered in patients with these syndromes show unique, clearly distinct mutational signatures that may facilitate the identification of these syndromes. On the basis of the prevalence of pathogenic MUTYH and NTHL1 variants in the normal population, we estimate that the frequency of the novel NTHL1-associated tumour syndrome is five times lower than that of MUTYH-associated polyposis.Entities:
Keywords: MUTYH; NTHL1; adenomatous polyposis; base excision repair; cancer predisposition; colorectal cancer; mutational signature; syndrome incidence
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29105096 DOI: 10.1002/path.5002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996