Two unrelated cases with biallelic CHEK2 variants:a novel condition with constitutional chromosomal instability?

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Abstract

Constitutional heterozygous mutations in CHEK2 gene have been associated with hereditary cancer risk. To date, only a few homozygous CHEK2 mutations have been reported in families with cancer susceptibility. Here, we report two unrelated individuals with a personal and familial cancer history in whom biallelic CHEK2 alterations were identified. The first case resulted homozygous for the CHEK2 c.793-1 G > A (p.Asp265Thrfs*10) variant, and the second one was found to be compound heterozygous for the c.1100delC (p.Thr367Metfs*15) and the c.1312 G > T (p.Asp438Tyr) variants. Multiple cytogenetic anomalies were demonstrated on peripheral lymphocytes of both patients. A literature revision showed that a single other CHEK2 homozygous variant was previously associated to a constitutional randomly occurring multi-translocation karyotype from peripheral blood in humans. We hypothesize that, at least some biallelic CHEK2 mutations might be associated with a novel disorder, further expanding the group of chromosome instability syndromes. Additional studies on larger cohorts are needed to confirm if chromosomal instability could represent a marker for CHEK2 constitutionally mutated recessive genotypes, and to investigate the cancer risk and the occurrence of other anomalies typically observed in chromosome instability syndromes.

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Bottillo, I., Savino, E., Majore, S., Mulargia, C., Valiante, M., Ferraris, A., … Grammatico, P. (2023). Two unrelated cases with biallelic CHEK2 variants:a novel condition with constitutional chromosomal instability? European Journal of Human Genetics, 31(4), 474–478. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-022-01270-z

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