Abstract

Identifying genetic cancer risk factors will lead to improved genetic counseling, cancer prevention and cancer care. Analyzing families with a strong history of breast cancer (BC) has been a successful method to identify genes that contribute to the disease. This has led to discoveries of high-risk genes like the BRCA-genes. Nevertheless, many BC incidences are of unknown causes. In this study, exome sequencing on 59 BC patients from 24 Swedish families with a strong history of BC was performed to identify variants in known and novel BC predisposing genes. First, we screened known BC genes and identified two pathogenic variants in the BRIP1 and PALB2 genes. Secondly, to identify novel BC genes, rare and high impact variants and segregating in families were analyzed to identify 544 variants in novel BC candidate genes. Of those, 22 variants were defined as high-risk variants. Several interesting genes, either previously linked with BC or in pathways that when flawed could contribute to BC, were among the detected genes. The strongest candidates identified are the FANCM gene, involved in DNA double-strand break repair, and the RAD54L gene, involved in DNA recombination. Our study shows identifying pathogenic variants is challenging despite a strong family history of BC. Several interesting candidates were observed here that need to be further studied.

Highlights

  • Identifying genetic cancer risk factors will lead to improved genetic counseling, cancer prevention and cancer care

  • Additional high-risk genes have been identified by the candidate gene approach where genes with a function that could contribute to breast cancer (BC), such as DNA repair mechanism, have been screened resulting in the identification of CHEK2, ATM, PALB2, and BRIP17

  • Recurrent genes, defined as genes segregating variants in more than one family, were seen among the BC families where we identified 46 variants located in 23 genes (Table S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying genetic cancer risk factors will lead to improved genetic counseling, cancer prevention and cancer care. Analyzing families with a strong history of breast cancer (BC) has been a successful method to identify genes that contribute to the disease. This has led to discoveries of high-risk genes like the BRCA-genes. Additional high-risk genes have been identified by the candidate gene approach where genes with a function that could contribute to BC, such as DNA repair mechanism, have been screened resulting in the identification of CHEK2, ATM, PALB2, and BRIP17. With improved technology and increased sample collection, extensive genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have linked more than 170 genomic loci to increased risk of ­BC8–13 These loci are common and confer low risk to BC

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