1. A functionally impaired missense variant identified in French Canadian families implicates FANCI as a candidate ovarian cancer-predisposing gene
- Author
-
Fierheller, CT, Guitton-Sert, L, Alenezi, WM, Revil, T, Oros, KK, Gao, Y, Bedard, K, Arcand, SL, Serruya, C, Behl, S, Meunier, L, Fleury, H, Fewings, E, Subramanian, DN, Nadaf, J, Bruce, JP, Bell, R, Provencher, D, Foulkes, WD, El Haffaf, Z, Mes-Masson, A-M, Majewski, J, Pugh, TJ, Tischkowitz, M, James, PA, Campbell, IG, Greenwood, CMT, Ragoussis, J, Masson, J-Y, Tonin, PN, Fierheller, CT, Guitton-Sert, L, Alenezi, WM, Revil, T, Oros, KK, Gao, Y, Bedard, K, Arcand, SL, Serruya, C, Behl, S, Meunier, L, Fleury, H, Fewings, E, Subramanian, DN, Nadaf, J, Bruce, JP, Bell, R, Provencher, D, Foulkes, WD, El Haffaf, Z, Mes-Masson, A-M, Majewski, J, Pugh, TJ, Tischkowitz, M, James, PA, Campbell, IG, Greenwood, CMT, Ragoussis, J, Masson, J-Y, and Tonin, PN
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Familial ovarian cancer (OC) cases not harbouring pathogenic variants in either of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 OC-predisposing genes, which function in homologous recombination (HR) of DNA, could involve pathogenic variants in other DNA repair pathway genes. METHODS: Whole exome sequencing was used to identify rare variants in HR genes in a BRCA1 and BRCA2 pathogenic variant negative OC family of French Canadian (FC) ancestry, a population exhibiting genetic drift. OC cases and cancer-free individuals from FC and non-FC populations were investigated for carrier frequency of FANCI c.1813C>T; p.L605F, the top-ranking candidate. Gene and protein expression were investigated in cancer cell lines and tissue microarrays, respectively. RESULTS: In FC subjects, c.1813C>T was more common in familial (7.1%, 3/42) than sporadic (1.6%, 7/439) OC cases (P = 0.048). Carriers were detected in 2.5% (74/2950) of cancer-free females though female/male carriers were more likely to have a first-degree relative with OC (121/5249, 2.3%; Spearman correlation = 0.037; P = 0.011), suggesting a role in risk. Many of the cancer-free females had host factors known to reduce risk to OC which could influence cancer risk in this population. There was an increased carrier frequency of FANCI c.1813C>T in BRCA1 and BRCA2 pathogenic variant negative OC families, when including the discovery family, compared to cancer-free females (3/23, 13%; OR = 5.8; 95%CI = 1.7-19; P = 0.005). In non-FC subjects, 10 candidate FANCI variants were identified in 4.1% (21/516) of Australian OC cases negative for pathogenic variants in BRCA1 and BRCA2, including 10 carriers of FANCI c.1813C>T. Candidate variants were significantly more common in familial OC than in sporadic OC (P = 0.04). Localization of FANCD2, part of the FANCI-FANCD2 (ID2) binding complex in the Fanconi anaemia (FA) pathway, to sites of induced DNA damage was severely impeded in cells expressing the p.L605F isoform. This isoform was expressed at
- Published
- 2021