Abstract Primary hyperparathyroidism is a common endocrine disorder that is most often caused by a sporadic single-gland parathyroid adenoma. Currently, the only known and experimentally validated oncoprotein for parathyroid adenomas is cyclin D1. The overexpression of cyclin D1 protein has been reported in twenty to forty percent of cases. Eight percent of this overexpression can be explained by DNA rearrangement involving the cyclin D1 locus. The remaining molecular mechanisms behind this overexpression have yet to be identified. In this study, we explored a potential parathyroid tumorigenic mechanism that could increase cyclin D1 stability through a defect in the AMBRA1 E3 ligase adaptor, a molecule responsible for its degradation. Evidence that AMBRA1 may be a tumor suppressor gene includes the accumulation of cyclin D with hyperproliferation in AMBRA1-deficient cells, the context-dependent growth of tumors in Ambra1-deficient mice, and the finding that low levels of AMBRA1 correlated with poor clinical outcomes in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). We have therefore proceeded examine AMBRA1 for evidence of tumor suppressor-type inactivation within a cohort of parathyroid adenomas. Genomic DNA from twenty-six typical sporadic parathyroid adenomas was subjected to PCR-amplification of all eighteen coding exons of AMBRA1, followed by Sanger sequencing. Sequences were analyzed by comparison to the normal reference sequence, seeking to assess any observed intragenic or splice-site variants as potential or likely loss-of-function mutations. Thus far, with ninety-seven percent of the coding region fully sequenced, no intragenic AMBRA1 inactivating mutations were observed. Three known single nucleotide polymorphisms, considered non-pathogenic, were identified: missense variant c.3028G>T, and 3' UTR variants c.*491T>C and c.*576A>T, each in a single tumor. Future study of increased numbers of parathyroid adenomas is needed to exclude the possibility that AMBRA1 inactivation could play a driver role in a small percentage of cases, and the possibility that AMBRA1 might contribute less directly e.g. via secondarily altered expression also warrants investigation. Nonetheless, our current observations strongly suggest that AMBRA1 does not have a frequent role as a classic 2-hit tumor suppressor gene in sporadic parathyroid adenomas. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.