Abstract

Endometriosis is an estrogen-dependent precancerous lesion exhibiting frequently perturbed level of steroid hormones and transcriptional‑regulating factor1 (TRERF1) has a crucial role in the production of steroid hormones including estrogen. Endometriosis has previously been revealed to be a precancerous lesion that harbors somatic mutations in cancer‑associated genes. Therefore, the authors of the present study hypothesize that TRERF1 aberrations may be involved in the development of endometriosis. In the present study, endometriotic lesions and paired blood samples from 92individuals with ovarian endometriosis were analyzed for the potential presence of TRERF1 mutations by sequencing the entire coding region and the corresponding intron‑exon boundaries of the TRERF1 gene. Two heterozygous missense somatic mutations [c.3166A>C (p.K1056Q) and c.3187 G>A (p.G1063R)] in the TRERF1 gene were identified in two out of 92 ectopic endometria (2.2%), to the best of our knowledge, these mutations have not been previously reported. From the two samples with TRERF1 mutations, one sample was from a 42‑year‑old patient also diagnosed with uterine leiomyoma and the other mutation was identified in a 36‑year‑old woman exhibiting no other apparent gynecological conditions. The evolutionary conservation analysis and insilico prediction of these TRERF1 mutations suggested that they may be pathogenic. To the best of our knowledge, the present study was the first to identify 2novel, potentially 'disease‑causing' TRERF1 somatic mutations in the endometriotic lesions in 2out of 92patients with ovarian endometriosis; therefore, TRERF1 mutations may be involved in the pathogenesis of ovarian endometriosis.

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