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Genetic and clinical landscape of breast cancers with germline BRCA1/2 variants.

Yukiko Inagaki-KawataKenichi YoshidaNobuko Kawaguchi-SakitaMasahiro KawashimaTomomi NishimuraNoriko SendaYusuke ShiozawaYasuhide TakeuchiYoshikage InoueAiko Sato-OtsuboYoichi FujiiYasuhito NannyaEiji SuzukiMasahiro TakadaHiroko TanakaYuichi ShiraishiKenichi ChibaYuki KataokaMasae ToriiHiroshi YoshibayashiKazuhiko YamagamiRyuji OkamuraYoshio MoriguchiHironori KatoShigeru TsuyukiAkira YamauchiHirofumi SuwaTakashi InamotoSatoru MiyanoSeishi OgawaMasakazu Toi
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
The genetic and clinical characteristics of breast tumors with germline variants, including their association with biallelic inactivation through loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) and second somatic mutations, remain elusive. We analyzed germline variants of 11 breast cancer susceptibility genes for 1,995 Japanese breast cancer patients, and identified 101 (5.1%) pathogenic variants, including 62 BRCA2 and 15 BRCA1 mutations. Genetic analysis of 64 BRCA1/2-mutated tumors including TCGA dataset tumors, revealed an association of biallelic inactivation with more extensive deletions, copy neutral LOH, gain with LOH and younger onset. Strikingly, TP53 and RB1 mutations were frequently observed in BRCA1- (94%) and BRCA2- (9.7%) mutated tumors with biallelic inactivation. Inactivation of TP53 and RB1 together with BRCA1 and BRCA2, respectively, involved LOH of chromosomes 17 and 13. Notably, BRCA1/2 tumors without biallelic inactivation were indistinguishable from those without germline variants. Our study highlights the heterogeneity and unique clonal selection pattern in breast cancers with germline variants.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • breast cancer risk
  • genome wide
  • dna repair
  • intellectual disability
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • transcription factor
  • wild type