Spectrum of ATM gene mutations in a hospital-based series of unselected breast cancer patients

Blood relatives of patients with the inherited disease ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) have an increased susceptibility for breast cancer. We therefore looked for sequence alterations of the ATM gene in a large hospital-based series of unselected breast cancer patients. The whole ATM coding sequence was...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2001-10, Vol.61 (20), p.7608-7615
Hauptverfasser: DÖRK, Thilo, BENDIX, Regina, WEISE, Sabine, STUHRMANN, Manfred, KARSTENS, Johann H, BREMER, Michael, RADES, Dirk, KLÖPPER, Karin, NICKE, Marion, SKAWRAN, Britta, HECTOR, Ariadne, YAMINI, Paria, STEINMANN, Diana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Blood relatives of patients with the inherited disease ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) have an increased susceptibility for breast cancer. We therefore looked for sequence alterations of the ATM gene in a large hospital-based series of unselected breast cancer patients. The whole ATM coding sequence was analyzed in genomic DNA samples from a core group of 192 consecutive breast cancer cases to define the spectrum of ATM gene mutations. Common sequence alterations were then screened in the whole series of 1000 breast cancer patients and in 500 random individuals. In the core group, 21 distinct sequence alterations were identified throughout the ATM coding region, and 1 common splicing mutation was uncovered in intron 10. Almost half of the breast cancer patients (46%) were heterozygotes for 1 of 16 different amino acid substitutions, and three patients (1.6%) carried a truncating mutation. These data indicate that approximately 1 in 50 German breast cancer patients is heterozygous for an A-T-causing mutation. In our extended series, the most common A-T mutation 1066-6T-->G was disclosed in 7 of 1000 (0.7%) breast cancer patients. Transcript analyses indicated that the loss of exon 11 in the ATM mRNA was the pathogenic consequence of this splicing mutation, which produced a G splice site substitution can be effective to prospectively identify A-T heterozygotes in an unselected cancer patient population.
ISSN:0008-5472
1538-7445