Evidence for a recessive inheritance of Turcot's syndrome caused by compound heterozygous mutations within the PMS2 gene
- 23 March 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Springer Nature in Oncogene
- Vol. 19 (13) , 1719-1723
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1203447
Abstract
Turcot's syndrome is a genetic disease characterized by the concurrence of primary brain tumors and colon cancers and/or multiple colorectal adenomas. We report a Turcot family with no parental consanguinity, in which two affected sisters, with no history of tumors in their parents, died of a brain tumor and of a colorectal tumor, respectively, at a very early age. The proband had a severe microsatellite instability (MIN) phenotype in both tumor and normal colon mucosa, and mutations in the TGFbeta-RII and APC genes in the colorectal tumor. We identified two germline mutations within the PMS2 gene: a G deletion (1221delG) in exon 11 and a four-base-pair deletion (2361delCTTC) in exon 14, both of which were inherited from the patient's unaffected parents. These results represent the first evidence that two germline frameshift mutations in PMS2, an MMR gene which is only rarely involved in HNPCC, are not pathogenic per se, but become so when occurring together in a compound heterozygote. The compound heterozygosity for two mutations in the PMS2 gene has implications for the role of protein PMS2 in the mismatch repair mechanism, as well as for the presymptomatic molecular diagnosis of at-risk family members. Furthermore, our data support and enlarge the notion that high DNA instability in normal tissues might trigger the development of cancer in this syndrome.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- A father and son with Turcot's syndromeDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1998
- Drastic genetic instability of tumors and normal tissues in Turcot syndromeOncogene, 1997
- ReviewBiological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler, 1996
- Inactivation of the Type II TGF-β Receptor in Colon Cancer Cells with Microsatellite InstabilityScience, 1995
- Mismatch Repair, Genetic Stability, and CancerScience, 1994
- Mutation of a mutL Homolog in Hereditary Colon CancerScience, 1994
- Mutation in the DNA mismatch repair gene homologue hMLH 1 is associated with hereditary non-polyposis colon cancerNature, 1994
- Genetic evidence that Turcot syndrome is not allelic to familial adenomatous polyposisAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1992
- Association between Neuroepithelial Tumor and Multiple Intestinal Polyposis (Turcot's Syndrome): Report of a Case and Critical Analysis of the LiteratureNeurosurgery, 1991
- Malignant tumors of the central nervous system associated with familial polyposis of the colonDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1959