Abstract

BackgroundGerm-line mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are major contributors to hereditary breast/ovarian cancer. Large rearrangements are less frequent in the BRCA2 gene than in BRCA1. We report, here, the first total deletion of exon 3 in the BRCA2 gene that was detected during screening of 2058 index cases from breast/ovarian cancer families for BRCA2 large rearrangements. Deletion of exon 3, which is in phase, does not alter the reading frame. Low levels of alternative transcripts lacking exon 3 (Δ3 delta3 transcript) have been reported in normal tissues, which raises the question whether deletion of exon 3 is pathogenic.MethodsLarge BRCA2 rearrangements were analysed by QMPSF (Quantitative Multiplex PCR of Short Fluorescent Fragments) or MLPA (Multiplex Ligation-Dependent Probe Amplification). The exon 3 deletion was characterized with a "zoom-in" dedicated CGH array to the BRCA2 gene and sequencing. To determine the effect of exon 3 deletion and assess its pathogenic effect, three methods of transcript quantification were used: fragment analysis of FAM-labelled PCR products, specific allelic expression using an intron 2 polymorphism and competitive quantitative RT-PCR.ResultsLarge rearrangements of BRCA2 were detected in six index cases out of 2058 tested (3% of all deleterious BRCA2 mutations). This study reports the first large rearrangement of the BRCA2 gene that includes all of exon 3 and leads to an in frame deletion of exon 3 at the transcriptional level. Thirty five variants in exon 3 and junction regions of BRCA2 are also reported, that contribute to the interpretation of the pathogenicity of the deletion. The quantitative approaches showed that there are three classes of delta3 BRCA2 transcripts (low, moderate and exclusive). Exclusive expression of the delta3 transcript by the mutant allele and segregation data provide evidence for a causal effect of the exon 3 deletion.ConclusionThis paper highlights that large rearrangements and total deletion of exon 3 in the BRCA2 gene could contribute to hereditary breast and/or ovarian cancer. In addition, our findings suggest that, to interpret the pathogenic effect of any variants of exon 3, both accurate transcript quantification and co-segregation analysis are required.

Highlights

  • Germ-line mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are major contributors to hereditary breast/ ovarian cancer

  • Point mutations in exon 3 Among the 2461 index cases analysed in the two Medical Centres, 35 variants were identified in exon 3

  • Co-segregation analysis To determine whether the exon 3 deletion co-segregates with cancer, we examined the occurrence of this allele in members of the family A-2005 with the Δ3-Large rearrangements (LRs) and of the family B-2002 with the c.316+3delA mutation

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Summary

Introduction

Germ-line mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are major contributors to hereditary breast/ ovarian cancer. Here, the first total deletion of exon 3 in the BRCA2 gene that was detected during screening of 2058 index cases from breast/ ovarian cancer families for BRCA2 large rearrangements. The BRCA2 gene (MIM#600185) is a tumour suppressor gene that codes for a 3,418 amino-acid protein. It is involved in DNA damage repair through homologous recombination, chromatin remodelling and regulation of transcription [1]. Genetic testing is performed in routine for women with severe family histories of breast and ovarian cancer, in order to identify deleterious mutations in the two susceptibility genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2. Seven large rearrangements of BRCA2 have been described in France [3]

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