Abstract

<div>Abstract<p>Inactivating mutations in several genes that encode components of the DNA repair machinery have been associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. To assess whether alterations in other DNA repair genes contribute to breast cancer and to further determine the relevance of these genes to pancreatic cancer, we performed mutational analysis of 32 DNA double-strand break repair genes in genomic DNA from 38 breast tumors, 48 pancreatic tumors, and 10 non-<i>BRCA1/BRCA2</i> hereditary breast cancer patients. A total of 494 coding exons were screened by denatured high-performance liquid chromatography and direct DNA sequencing. Two inactivating mutations were identified in breast tumor samples, a germline single-nucleotide deletion in <i>POLQ</i> (c.3605delT) and a somatic nonsense change in <i>PRKDC</i> (c.2408C>A, p.Ser803X). Two germline-inactivating mutations in <i>RAD50</i> (c.1875C>G, p.Tyr625X and IVS14+1G>A) were also detected in separate pancreatic tumor samples. In addition, 35 novel nonsynonymous amino acid substitutions, resulting from two in-frame deletions and 33 single nucleotide alterations, were identified. Seven of these were predicted to influence protein function. A separate analysis of the <i>CLSPN</i> c.3839C>T (rs35490896) variant that was observed more frequently in breast tumors than in pancreatic tumors or normal controls failed to detect a significant association with breast cancer risk in a Mayo Clinic breast cancer case-control study. In conclusion, this screen of DNA repair genes implicates <i>PRKDC</i> and <i>POLQ</i> as candidate tumor suppressor genes involved in breast cancer and suggests that inactivating mutations in <i>RAD50</i> predispose to pancreatic cancer as well as breast cancer. [Cancer Res 2008;68(4):971–5]</p></div>

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