Women
with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) syndrome represent a
unique group who are diagnosed at a younger age and result in an
increased lifetime risk for developing breast, ovarian and other
cancers. This review integrates recent progress and insights into the
molecular basis that underlie the HBOC syndrome. A review of English
language literature was performed by searching MEDLINE published between
January 1994 and October 2012. Mutations and common sequence variants
in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 (BRCA) genes are responsible for the majority of
HBOC syndrome. Lifetime cancer risks in BRCA mutation carriers are
60-80% for breast cancer and 20-40% for ovarian cancer. Mutations in
BRCA genes cannot account for all cases of HBOC, indicating that the
remaining cases can be attributed to the involvement of constitutive
epimutations or other cancer susceptibility genes, which include Fanconi
anemia (FA) cluster (FANCD2, FANCA and FANCC), mismatch repair (MMR)
cluster (MLH1, MSH2, PMS1, PMS2 and MSH6) (Blogger's Note: Lynch Syndrome mutations), DNA repair cluster (ATM, ATR
and CHK1/2), and tumor suppressor cluster (TP53, SKT11 and PTEN).
Sporadic breast cancers with TP53 mutations or epigenetic silencing
(hypermethylation), ER- and PgR-negative status, an earlier age of onset
and high tumor grade resemble phenotypically BRCA1 mutated cancers
termed ‘BRCAness’, those with no BRCA mutations but with a dysfunction
of the DNA repair system. In conclusion, genetic or epigenetic
loss-of-function mutations of genes that are known to be involved in the
repair of DNA damage may lead to increased risk of developing a broad
spectrum of breast and ovarian cancers.
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Monday, June 24, 2013
Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility (note references to Lynch syndrome/other mutations)genes (Review)
Abstract
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