Abstract

Background. The identification of the ethnospecific mutations associated with hereditary breast cancer remains challenging. Next generation sequencing (Ngs) technology fully enables the compilation of germline variants associated with the risk for inherited diseases. Despite the success of the Ngs, up to 20 % of molecular tests report genetic variant of unknown significance (Vus) or novel variants that have never been previously described and their clinical significances are unknown. To obtain extended information about the variants of the unknown significance, it is necessary to use an alternative approach for the analysis of the Ngs data. To obtain extended characteristic about the unknown significance variants, it is necessary to search for additional tools for the analysis of the Ngs data. Material and methods. We reclassified the mutation of the unknown significance using the activedrivedb database that assessed the effect of mutations on sites of post-translational modifications, and the proteinpaint tool that complemented the existing cancer genome portals and provided a comprehensive and intuitive view of cancer genomic data. Results. In this study, we report a 44-year-old tuvinian woman with a family history of breast cancer. Based on the Ngs data, mutational analysis revealed the presence of the lrg_321t1: c.80c>t heterozygous variant in exon 2, which led to the proline to leucine change at codon 27 of the protein. In the dbpubmed database, this mutation was determined as unknown significance due to data limitation. According to the data of the activedriverdb tool, this mutation is located distally at the site of post-translational protein modification, which is responsible for binding to kinases that regulate genes of the cell cycle, etc. (atm, chek2, cdk, mapk). In accordance with proteinpaint tool, the lrg_321t1: c.80c>t mutation is located in functionally specialized transactivation domains and codon of the tp53 gene, where the pathogenic mutation associated with li-Fraumeni syndrome has been earlier described. Conclusion. This report is the first to describe a new variant in the tp53 gene (rs1555526933), which is likely to be associated with hereditary cancer-predisposing syndrome, including li-Fraumeni syndrome, in a tuvinian Bc patient with young-onset and familial Bc.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer (BC) is the most common female malignancy worldwide

  • The interpretation of variants of unknown significance (VUS) is still a major challenge and misunderstanding of them can lead to serious clinical mistakes for patients and their families [2, 3]

  • We report the case of a 44-year-old Tuvinian woman with breast cancer in early age and family history

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer (BC) is the most common female malignancy worldwide. Germline alterations are responsible for early-onset BC or ovarian cancer in 7–15 % of patients [1]. To obtain extended information about the variants of the unknown significance, it is necessary to use an alternative approach for the analysis of the NGS data. To obtain extended characteristic about the unknown significance variants, it is necessary to search for additional tools for the analysis of the NGS data. According to the data of the ActiveDriverDB tool, this mutation is located distally at the site of post-translational protein modification, which is responsible for binding to kinases that regulate genes of the cell cycle, etc. This report is the first to describe a new variant in the TP53 gene (rs1555526933), which is likely to be associated with hereditary cancer-predisposing syndrome, including Li-Fraumeni syndrome, in a Tuvinian BC patient with young-onset and familial BC

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.