Exome sequencing and case–control analyses identify RCC1 as a candidate breast cancer susceptibility gene

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Abstract

Breast cancer is a genetic disease but the known genes explain a minority of cases. To elucidate the molecular basis of breast cancer in the Tunisian population, we performed exome sequencing on six BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation-negative patients with familial breast cancer and identified a novel frameshift mutation in RCC1, encoding the Regulator of Chromosome Condensation 1. Subsequent genotyping detected the 19-bp deletion in additional 5 out of 153 (3%) breast cancer patients but in none of 400 female controls (p = 0.0015). The deletion was enriched in patients with a positive family history (5%, p = 0.0009) and co-segregated with breast cancer in the initial pedigree. The mutant allele was lost in 4/6 breast tumors from mutation carriers which may be consistent with the hypothesis that RCC1 dysfunction provides a selective disadvantage at the stage of tumor progression. In summary, we propose RCC1 as a likely breast cancer susceptibility gene in the Tunisian population.

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Riahi, A., Radmanesh, H., Schürmann, P., Bogdanova, N., Geffers, R., Meddeb, R., … Dörk, T. (2018). Exome sequencing and case–control analyses identify RCC1 as a candidate breast cancer susceptibility gene. International Journal of Cancer, 142(12), 2512–2517. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.31273

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