Journal article
Consequences of germline variation disrupting the constitutional translational initiation codon start sites of MLH1 and BRCA2: Use of potential alternative start sites and implications for predicting variant pathogenicity
MT Parsons, PJ Whiley, J Beesley, M Drost, N de Wind, BA Thompson, L Marquart, JL Hopper, MA Jenkins, MA Brown, K Tucker, L Warwick, DD Buchanan, AB Spurdle
Molecular Carcinogenesis | WILEY | Published : 2015
DOI: 10.1002/mc.22116
Abstract
Variants that disrupt the translation initiation sequences in cancer predisposition genes are generally assumed to be deleterious. However, few studies have validated these assumptions with functional and clinical data. Two cancer syndrome gene variants likely to affect native translation initiation were identified by clinical genetic testing: MLH1:c.1A>G p.(Met1?) and BRCA2:c.67+3A>G. In vitro GFP-reporter assays were conducted to assess the consequences of translation initiation disruption on alternative downstream initiation codon usage. Analysis of MLH1:c.1A>G p.(Met1?) showed that translation was mostly initiated at an in-frame position 103 nucleotides downstream, but also at two ATG se..
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Grants
Awarded by National Institutes of Health
Funding Acknowledgements
Grant sponsor: National Health and Medical Research Council; Grant number: NHMRC ID1010719; Grant sponsor: Cancer Australia; Grant number: ID#1010859; Grant sponsor: National Cancer Institute; Grant sponsor: National Institutes of Health; Grant number: RFA # CA-95-011; Grant sponsor: Australasian Colorectal Cancer Family Registry; Grant number: U01 CA097735