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Association of a novel point mutation in MSH2 gene with familial multiple primary cancers
Authors:Hai Hu  Hong Li  Feng Jiao  Ting Han  Meng Zhuo  Jiujie Cui  Yixue Li  Liwei Wang
Institution:1.Department of Oncology, State Key Laboratory for Oncogenes and Related Genes, Renji Hospital,School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai Cancer Institute,Shanghai,China;2.Key Lab of computational Biology, CAS-MPG Partner Institute for Computational Biology,Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences,Shanghai,China;3.Shanghai Center for Bio information Technology,Shanghai,China;4.Department of Medical Oncology and Pancreatic Cancer Center, Shanghai General Hospital,School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University,Shanghai,China
Abstract:

Background

Multiple primary cancers (MPC) have been identified as two or more cancers without any subordinate relationship that occur either simultaneously or metachronously in the same or different organs of an individual. Lynch syndrome is an autosomal dominant genetic disorder that increases the risk of many types of cancers. Lynch syndrome patients who suffer more than two cancers can also be considered as MPC; patients of this kind provide unique resources to learn how genetic mutation causes MPC in different tissues.

Methods

We performed a whole genome sequencing on blood cells and two tumor samples of a Lynch syndrome patient who was diagnosed with five primary cancers. The mutational landscape of the tumors, including somatic point mutations and copy number alternations, was characterized. We also compared Lynch syndrome with sporadic cancers and proposed a model to illustrate the mutational process by which Lynch syndrome progresses to MPC.

Results

We revealed a novel pathologic mutation on the MSH2 gene (G504 splicing) that associates with Lynch syndrome. Systematical comparison of the mutation landscape revealed that multiple cancers in the proband were evolutionarily independent. Integrative analysis showed that truncating mutations of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes were significantly enriched in the patient. A mutation progress model that included germline mutations of MMR genes, double hits of MMR system, mutations in tissue-specific driver genes, and rapid accumulation of additional passenger mutations was proposed to illustrate how MPC occurs in Lynch syndrome patients.

Conclusion

Our findings demonstrate that both germline and somatic alterations are driving forces of carcinogenesis, which may resolve the carcinogenic theory of Lynch syndrome.
Keywords:
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