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The challenges of finding the gene responsible for a rare, autosomal dominant gastric cancer susceptibility syndrome

Authors :
N Wayte
Graeme Suthers
Sue Healey
Jun Jun Li
Daniel L. Worthley
I Schrader
David G. Huntsman
N. M. Lindor
Igor V. Makunin
David E. Goldgar
Georgia Chenevix-Trench
Kelly-Anne Phillips
Source :
Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice, Vol 10, Iss Suppl 2, p A71 (2012), Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
BMC, 2012.

Abstract

Gastric Adenocarcinoma and Proximal Polyposis of the Stomach (GAPPS) is a newly described, rare autosomal dominant syndrome, characterized by fundic gland polyposis with occasional hyperplastic and adenomatous polyps. We diagnosed GAPPS in a large Australian (Family 1) and two smaller North American families (Family 2 and 3). Mutations in APC, MUTYH, CDH1, SMAD4, BMPR1A, STK11 and PTEN were excluded in all families by sequence analysis of exons and flanking regions, as well as by assays for deletion or duplication of exons. We mapped the GAPPS gene in Family 1 by linkage analysis (LOD score 4.21) to a 20Mb region which contains about 60 genes. Short tandem repeat genotyping showed that the affected members of Family 2 share a haplotype in this 20Mb region, but analysis of Affymetrix SNP 6.0 data from three affected members of Family 2 showed that they also shared several other regions of the genome. However, both Family 2 and 3 are too small for definitive linkage analysis. We have carried out full exome sequencing for three affected individuals in Family 1 (and targeted sequencing of the linked region in another individual), and of three affected members of Family 2. We did not find any rare coding or splice site variants in the linked region that were shared by all affected members of Family 1; nor any from the same region in both affected members of Family 2. All coding exons and miR genes in the linked region have been sequenced at least 30X at every base, or by Sanger sequencing, except for seven exons for which Sanger sequencing is yet to be completed. We will also use Sanger sequencing to improve the coverage of exons in the linked region in Family 2. However, our current hypothesis is that non-coding mutations in the linked region are responsible for the GAPPS syndrome in both Families 1 and 2 and so whole genome sequence analysis for two affected members in Family 1 has been performed and analysis is underway.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18974287
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68e032ebef075e1b51d7177f32c22056