Germline splicing mutations of CDKN2A predispose to melanoma
Coding mutations of the CDKN2A gene on chromosome 9p21 cosegregate with 25–60% of familial melanoma cases, but there remains a number of 9p21 -linked kindreds that lack germline coding mutations of CDKN2A . We sequenced CDKN2A exons 1 α , 2, 3, and the adjacent intronic regions in 167 melanoma-prone...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oncogene 2003-09, Vol.22 (41), p.6387-6394 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Coding mutations of the
CDKN2A
gene on chromosome
9p21
cosegregate with 25–60% of familial melanoma cases, but there remains a number of
9p21
-linked kindreds that lack germline coding mutations of
CDKN2A
. We sequenced
CDKN2A
exons 1
α
, 2, 3, and the adjacent intronic regions in 167 melanoma-prone families (at least two affected first-degree relatives), and detected four splice site variations, three of which cosegregate with the disease. RT–PCR experiments verified that these three variants, including an A
G
gt to A
T
gt mutation that demonstrates a founder effect, do affect splicing. While an exon 1
α
splice donor site mutation incompletely abolishes splicing, the correctly spliced mRNA yields a protein (Q50P) that cannot effectively interact with CDK4. We also performed RT–PCR on mRNA from 16 melanoma-prone kindreds to search for cryptic splice sites deep within introns, but identified no splice variants. Meanwhile, we screened 139 affected families using allele-specific PCR for the recently discovered IVS2−105A>G mutation, but found only one family that possesses this alteration. We conclude that splice site mutations do predispose to disease in a subset of melanoma-prone kindreds. Characterization of additional splice site variants and other noncoding alterations of
CDKN2A
should allow us to detect a wider range of mutations in at-risk patients. |
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ISSN: | 0950-9232 1476-5594 |
DOI: | 10.1038/sj.onc.1206736 |