Abstract

IntroductionPopulation-based studies of breast cancer have estimated that some PALB2 mutations confer a breast cancer risk (penetrance) comparable to the average pathogenic mutation in BRCA2. As this risk is of clinical relevance, we sought to identify mono-allelic PALB2 mutations and determine their frequencies in multiple-case breast cancer families attending Familial Cancer Clinics in Australia and New Zealand.MethodsThe youngest affected woman, not known to carry a mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2, from 747 multiple-case breast cancer families participating in kConFab were selected for PALB2 mutation screening. The coding and flanking intronic regions of PALB2 in DNA extracted from blood were screened using high-resolution melt curve analysis with Sanger sequencing confirmation. Where possible, relatives of women found to carry PALB2 mutations were genotyped for the family-specific mutation, mutant transcripts were characterised and breast tumours arising in mutation carriers were recalled and reviewed. Missense mutations were assessed for potential to disrupt protein function via SIFT, Align GVGD and Polyphen-2.ResultsThe mutation screen identified two nonsense mutations (PALB2 c.3113G>A in eight women and PALB2 c.196C>T in one woman), two frameshift mutations (PALB2 c.1947_1948insA and PALB2 c.2982_2983insT each in one woman), 10 missense variants, eight synonymous variants and four variants in intronic regions. Of the four PALB2 mutations identified that were predicted to produce truncated protein products, only PALB2 c.1947_1948insA had not previously been reported. PALB2 c.3113G>A and PALB2 c.196C>T were previously identified in the Australian population whereas PALB2 c.2982_2983insT was previously reported in the UK population. Transcripts derived from three of these mutant PALB2 alleles were vulnerable to nonsense-mediated decay. One missense mutation (PALB2 c.2993G>A) was predicted to disrupt protein function via the three in silico assessment methods applied. The majority of breast cancers arising in carriers that were available for review were high-grade invasive ductal carcinomas. Conclusions: About 1.5% (95% CI 0.6to 2.4) of Australasian multiple-case breast cancer families attending clinics are segregating protein-truncating mutations in PALB2, most being PALB2 c.3113G>A, p.Trp1038*. Given the prevalence, breast cancer risk, and tumour grade associated with this mutation, consideration of clinical PALB2 testing is warranted.

Highlights

  • Population-based studies of breast cancer have estimated that some PALB2 mutations confer a breast cancer risk comparable to the average pathogenic mutation in BRCA2

  • Of the 22 exonic variants, two were nonsense mutations resulting in predicted stop codons (PALB2 c.196C>T, p.Gln66*; PALB2 c.3113G>A, p.Trp1038*), two were frameshift mutations resulting in premature termination codons (PTC; PALB2 c.1947_1948insA, p.Glu650fs*13; PALB2 c.2982_2983insT, p.Ala995fs*16), 10 were missense variants, and the remaining eight were synonymous variants

  • Four variants were identified in the intronic region of PALB2, three of these were single-base changes and one was an insertion of three bases towards the 5’ end of intron 4. 10 of the 26 variants had not been previously reported (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Population-based studies of breast cancer have estimated that some PALB2 mutations confer a breast cancer risk (penetrance) comparable to the average pathogenic mutation in BRCA2. The search for additional breast cancer susceptibility genes has been of great interest and has successfully led to the identification and characterisation of ATM (MIM#607585) [5], BRIP1 (MIM#605882) [6], CHEK2 (MIM#604373) [7], and PALB2 (MIM#610355) [8] Mutations in these genes are rare and early reports suggested that, on average, they are associated with moderate risks of breast cancer (lower than the high breast cancer risks associated with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations) [5,6,8,9]. These risks are comparable to the average breast cancer risk associated with carrying a BRCA2 mutation with penetrance to age 70 of 45% (95%CI 31 to 56) [9]

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