Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Significance
A functionally significant recurrent ERCC3 mutation increased the risk for breast cancer in a genetic isolate. Mutated cell lines showed lower survival after in vitro exposure to DNA-damaging agents. Thus, similar to tumors arising in the background of homologous repair defects, mutations in nucleotide excision repair genes such as ERCC3 could constitute potential therapeutic targets in a subset of hereditary breast cancers. Cancer Discov; 6(11); 1267-75. ©2016 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1197.
SUBMITTER: Vijai J
PROVIDER: S-EPMC5614601 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Nov
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Vijai Joseph J Topka Sabine S Villano Danylo D Ravichandran Vignesh V Maxwell Kara N KN Maria Ann A Thomas Tinu T Gaddam Pragna P Lincoln Anne A Kazzaz Sarah S Wenz Brandon B Carmi Shai S Schrader Kasmintan A KA Hart Steven N SN Lipkin Steve M SM Neuhausen Susan L SL Walsh Michael F MF Zhang Liying L Lejbkowicz Flavio F Rennert Hedy H Stadler Zsofia K ZK Robson Mark M Weitzel Jeffrey N JN Domchek Susan S Daly Mark J MJ Couch Fergus J FJ Nathanson Katherine L KL Norton Larry L Rennert Gad G Offit Kenneth K
Cancer discovery 20160921 11
Known gene mutations account for approximately 50% of the hereditary risk for breast cancer. Moderate and low penetrance variants, discovered by genomic approaches, account for an as-yet-unknown proportion of the remaining heritability. A truncating mutation c.325C>T:p.Arg109* (R109X) in the ATP-dependent helicase ERCC3 was observed recurrently among exomes sequenced in BRCA wild-type, breast cancer-affected individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. Modeling of the mutation in ERCC3-deficient or ...[more]