BRCA1 polymorphism in breast cancer patients from Argentina
Author(s) -
OMAR JAURE,
Eliaoelia Alonso,
Diego Aguilera Braico,
Alvaro Eloy Nieto,
Manuela Orozco,
CECILIA MORELLI,
Alejandro Ferro,
Elena Barutta,
E. Chris Vincent,
Domingo Martínez,
Ignacio Martı́nez,
MARIA INES MAEGLI,
Alejandro Frizza,
RUBEN KOWALYZYN,
MARISA SALVADORI,
PAUL GINESTET,
MARIA L. GONZALEZ DONNA,
Gabriela Balogh
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
oncology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.766
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1792-1082
pISSN - 1792-1074
DOI - 10.3892/ol.2014.2772
Subject(s) - exon , breast cancer , genetics , biology , cancer , single strand conformation polymorphism , oncology , gene , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology
Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in females in Argentina, with an incidence rate similar to that in the USA. However, the contribution of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation in breast cancer incidence has not yet been investigated in Argentina. In order to evaluate which BRCA1 polymorphisms or mutations characterize female breast cancer in Argentina, the current study enrolled 206 females with breast cancer from several hospitals from the southeast of Argentina. A buccal smear sample was obtained in duplicate from each patient and the DNA samples were processed for polymorphism analysis using the single-strand conformational polymorphism technique. The polymorphisms in BRCA1 were investigated using a combination of 15 primers to analyze exons 2, 3, 5, 20 and 11 (including the 11.1 to 11.12 regions). The BRCA1 mutations were confirmed by direct sequencing. Samples were successfully examined from 154 females and, among these, 16 mutations were identified in the BRCA1 gene representing 13.9% of the samples analyzed. One patient was identified with a polymorphism in exon 2 (0.86%), four in exon 20 (3.48%), four in exon 11.3 (3.48%), one in exon 11.7 (0.86%), two in exon 11.8 (1.74%), one in exon 11.10 (0.86%) and one in exon 11.11 (0.86%). The most prevalent alteration in BRCA1 was located in exon 11 (11 out of 16 patients; 68.75%). The objective of our next study is to evaluate the prevalence of mutations in the BRCA2 gene and analyze the BRCA1 gene in the healthy relatives of BRCA1 mutation carriers.
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