Tuesday, October 10, 2006

New Breast Cancer Susceptibility Gene Identified

Women with mutations in a gene called BRIP1 have twice the normal risk of breast cancer, according to a study to be published in November issue of Nature Genetics.

Mutations in 3 genes- BRCA1, BRCA2 and TP53- are known to greatly increase the chance of developing breast cancer over a lifetime: for example, women carrying a BRCA mutation have a 50-80% chance of developing the disease. Mutations in 2 other genes- CHEK2 and ATM- confer a much more modest risk. Researcher Nazneen Rahman and colleagues screened 1,212 women with breast cancer, who did not have mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2, for mutations in BRIP1. They report that 9 of these women had mutations in BRIP1 gene, which most likely inactivates the BRIP1 protein; only 2 of 2,081 women in a 'control' group without breast cancer demonstrated such mutations.

The authors estimate- by taking into consideration information from the control group and the families of affected individuals- that BRIP1 mutations result in an approximately 2-fold increase in the risk of breast cancer, which puts the gene into the same class as CHEK2 and ATM. They believe that mutations in these so-called ‘low-penetrance’ susceptibility genes likely only predispose to cancer in concert with other mutations and/or environmental factors, and account for only a small fraction of the familial risk of breast cancer. Like the other risk genes, BRIP1 is involved in DNA repair, lending support to the idea that unrepaired DNA damage is a key trigger for breast cancer development.
(ResearchSEA)

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