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The complete BRCA2 gene and mutations in chromosome 13q-linked kindreds

Authors :
Russell Bell
Fernand Labrie
Jodi Mcarthur-Morrison
S.C. Snyder
Robert Kehrer
Linda Steele
Thaylon Davis
K. Nguyen
Martine Dumont
J.T. Mitchell
Alun Thomas
Teresa Janecki
Mark H. Skolnick
Lisa A. Cannon-Albright
M. Stringfellow
Chantal Samson
David H. F. Teng
Alexander Kamb
T. Hattier
Barbara L. Weber
Sofia D. Merajver
Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet
Hiroaki Shizuya
David E. Goldgar
Marianne Schroeder
T.D. Tran
Ping Jiang
Carole Bélanger
Jorunn E. Eyfjord
Simin Berry
Jacques Simard
J.-F. Leblanc
Martine Tranchant
Steinunn Thorlacius
Qian Chen
Robert Bogden
Yi Peng
Jane Weaver-Feldhaus
Sean V. Tavtigian
Fergus J. Couch
Cheryl Frye
Johanna M. Rommens
Alexander K. C. Wong
Srikanth Jammulapati
C. Stroup
Bradley D. Swedlund
Susan L. Neuhausen
Donna M Shattuck-Eidens
Kenneth Offit
J. Swense
Source :
Nature Genetics. 12:333-337
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1996.

Abstract

Breast carcinoma is the most common malignancy among women in developed countries. Because family history remains the strongest single predictor of breast cancer risk, attention has focused on the role of highly penetrant, dominantly inherited genes in cancer-prone kindreds (1). BRCA1 was localized to chromosome 17 through analysis of a set of high-risk kindreds (2), and then identified four years later by a positional cloning strategy (3). BRCA2 was mapped to chromosomal 13q at about the same time (4). Just fifteen months later, Wooster et al. (5) reported a partial BRCA2 sequence and six mutations predicted to cause truncation of the BRCA2 protein. While these findings provide strong evidence that the identified gene corresponds to BRCA2, only two thirds of the coding sequence and 8 out of 27 exons were isolated and screened; consequently, several questions remained unanswered regarding the nature of BRCA2 and the frequency of mutations in 13q-linked families. We have now determined the complete coding sequence and exonic structure of BRCA2 (GenBank accession #U43746), and examined its pattern of expression. Here, we provide sequences for a set of PCR primers sufficient to screen the entire coding sequence of BRCA2 using genomic DNA. We also report a mutational analysis of BRCA2 in families selected on the basis of linkage analysis and/or the presence of one or more cases of male breast cancer. Together with the specific mutations described previously, our data provide preliminary insight into the BRCA2 mutation profile.

Details

ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f2ed0a2178f423da973579178b301888
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng0396-333