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Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 1/2009

01-05-2009 | Preclinical Study

Mutation analysis of BRIP1/BACH1 in BRCA1/BRCA2 negative Chinese women with early onset breast cancer or affected relatives

Authors: A-Yong Cao, Juan Huang, Zhen Hu, Wen-Feng Li, Zhong-Liang Ma, Li-Li Tang, Bin Zhang, Feng-Xi Su, Jie Zhou, Gen-Hong Di, Kun-Wei Shen, Jiong Wu, Jin-Song Lu, Jian-Min Luo, Wen-Tao Yuan, Zhen-Zhou Shen, Wei Huang, Zhi-Ming Shao

Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | Issue 1/2009

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Abstract

The proper interaction between BRIP1/BACH1 and BRCA1 protein has been found to be crucial for BRCA1-mediated DNA double-strand break repair and BRIP1/BACH1 mutations were estimated to confer a relative risk for breast cancer of 2.0 in western populations. In Chinese population, BRCA1 mutations could explain a relatively large proportion of inherited breast cancer cases in comparison with BRCA2 mutations, which probably deduced a hypothesis that those genes involved in BRCA1-mediated DNA repair pathway might play a more significant role in the etiology of Chinese breast cancer. To investigate the contribution of BRIP1/BACH1 mutations to the predisposition of Chinese non-BRCA1/BRCA2 hereditary breast cancer, we screened all the coding exons and adjacent intronic splice junction regions of BRIP1/BACH1 in 357 Chinese women with early-onset breast cancer or affected relatives from five different breast disease clinical centers in China, using PCR-DHPLC and DNA sequencing analysis. Some genetic variants identified in the cases were then studied in 864 normal controls with no personal or family history of breast cancer. We found no protein-truncated mutations in our population, while a novel recurrent non-synonymous variant, Q944E, was detected in two independent families in contrast with none in the controls, interestingly, this alteration occurs in the BRCA1 binding domain of the BACH1 protein. Then a further study performed on the two mutation positive families revealed the partial co-segregation of this mutation allele with cancer. The novel alteration Q944E identified in our study possibly represents a rare disease-related allele, nevertheless functional analysis is still warranted to resolve the ability of this altered BACH1 protein to bind BRCA1. Altogether, the results of our study indicated that germline mutations in BRIP1/BACH were extremely rare in Chinese population and there was no evidence for the recommendation of BRIP1/BACH1 for genetic testing in Chinese.
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Metadata
Title
Mutation analysis of BRIP1/BACH1 in BRCA1/BRCA2 negative Chinese women with early onset breast cancer or affected relatives
Authors
A-Yong Cao
Juan Huang
Zhen Hu
Wen-Feng Li
Zhong-Liang Ma
Li-Li Tang
Bin Zhang
Feng-Xi Su
Jie Zhou
Gen-Hong Di
Kun-Wei Shen
Jiong Wu
Jin-Song Lu
Jian-Min Luo
Wen-Tao Yuan
Zhen-Zhou Shen
Wei Huang
Zhi-Ming Shao
Publication date
01-05-2009
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment / Issue 1/2009
Print ISSN: 0167-6806
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7217
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-008-0052-z

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