Abstract

The association of BRCA1/2 mutations with melanoma is not completely determined; the interpretation of variants of unknown significance is also problematic. To evaluate these issues we explored the molecular basis of melanoma risk by performing whole-exome sequencing on a cohort of 96 unrelated Polish early-onset melanoma patients and targeted sequencing of BRCA1/2 genes on additional 30 melanoma patients with familial aggregation of breast and other cancers. Sequencing was performed on peripheral blood. We evaluated MutationTaster, Polyphen2, SIFT, PROVEAN algorithms, analyzed segregation with cancer disease (in both families with identified BRCA2 variants) and in one family performed LOH (based on 2 primary tumors). We found neither pathogenic mutations nor variants of unknown significance within BRCA1. We identified two BRCA2 variants of unknown significance: c.9334G>A and c.4534 C>T. Disease allele frequency was evaluated by genotyping of 1230 consecutive melanoma cases, 5000 breast cancer patients, 3500 prostate cancers and 9900 controls. Both variants were found to be absent among unselected cancer patients and healthy controls. The MutationTaster, Polyphen2 and SIFT algorithms indicate that c.9334G>A is a damaging variant. Due to lack of tumour tissue LOH analysis could not be performed for this variant. The variant segregated with the disease. The c.4534 C>T variant did not segregate with disease, there was no LOH of the variant. The c.9334G>A variant, classified as a rare variant of unknown significance, on current evidence may predisposes to cancers of the breast, prostate and melanoma. Functional studies to describe how the DNA change affects the protein function and a large multi-center study to evaluate its penetrance are required.

Highlights

  • Melanoma is one of the most aggressive human malignancies

  • In the validation phase we studied a group of 5000 women with unselected breast cancer, 3500 men with unselected prostate cancer and 9900 healthy controls

  • We found neither pathogenic mutations nor variants of unknown significance within BRCA1 sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma is one of the most aggressive human malignancies. The incidence of malignant melanoma (MM) of the skin is increasing worldwide, with the most rapid increase observed in Caucasian populations [1]. In Poland the number of affected individuals has increased by more than 60% over the past eleven years and accounts for over 2600 new diagnosed annually. The etiology of melanoma is complex, involving both genetic and environmental factors. Significant heritability of this malignancy was reported from large twin studies [2]. Studies provide strong support for heterogeneous mechanisms involved in an inherited susceptibility to melanoma, likely as a result of polygenic factors that influence both inherited high-risk and low-risk alleles

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