6533b7d4fe1ef96bd12633b4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

4843delC of the BRCA1 gene is a possible founder mutation in Southern Italy (Sicily).

Valentina CalòClaudia AugelloValentina SchiroViviana BazanEva SurmaczElena FoddaiGaspare GulottaAntonio RussoMassimo CajozzoGiuseppe ColucciSandra CascioGiuseppe BadalamentiLoredana BrunoValentina AgneseNicola GebbiaFloriana BarberaC. Intrivici

subject

MaleBRCA1 gene Founder mutation Haplotype analysis Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer Sicilian patientsSettore MED/06 - Oncologia MedicaGenetic counselingPopulationDNA Mutational AnalysisGenes BRCA1Single-nucleotide polymorphismBreast NeoplasmsBiologyBRCA1 geneHaplotype analysiHumansAlleleeducationAllelotypeFounder mutationSicilyGeneticsOvarian Neoplasmseducation.field_of_studyHaplotypeHematologylanguage.human_languageFounder EffectPedigreeOncologyHaplotypesHaplotype frequencylanguageFemaleSicilianGene DeletionFounder effectGenetic counselingMicrosatellite Repeats

description

Various studies have been published in Italy regarding the different BRCA1 mutations, but only the BRCA1-5083del19 mutation is recurrent and specific to individuals of Italian descent with a founder effect on the Calabrian population. In our previous study, BRCA1-5083del19 mutation carriers were found in four index cases of 106 Sicilian patients selected for familial and/or hereditary breast/ovarian cancers. The high frequency rate of this mutation identified in the Sicilian population led us to perform haplotype analysis in all family carriers. Five highly polymorphic microsatellite markers were used (D17S1320, D17S932, D17S1323, D17S1326, D17S1325) to establish whether or not all these families had a common ancestor. This analysis showed that all mutation carriers of these families had a common allele. None of the non-carriers of the mutation or of the 50 healthy Sicilian controls showed this haplotype. This allelotype analysis highlighted the presence of a common allele (ancestor), thus suggesting the presence of a founder effect in the Sicilian population. Our results are in contrast with other studies but only the allelotype analysis of all the BRCA1-5083del19 mutation carriers of two neighboring regions of the south of Italy (Calabria and Sicily) will make it possible to identify the real ancestor of this mutation.

10.1093/annonc/mdm235http://hdl.handle.net/10447/9069