Discovery of a new genetic syndrome that predisposes the body to cancer

A new syndrome caused by biallelic mutations in the FANCM gene predisposes the body to the appearance of tumours and causes rejection to chemotherapy treatments. Contrary to what scientists believed, the gene does not cause Fanconi anaemia. Researchers recommend modifying the clinical monitoring of patients with these mutations.

A study led by Jordi Surrallés, professor of the Department of Genetics and Microbiology at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, director of the Genetics Unit at the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau and lead researcher at the Centre for Biomedical Network Research on Rare Diseases (CIBERER), has identified a new genetic syndrome caused by mutations in both copies of the FANCM gene, also known as biallelic mutations. The results, published in Genetics in Medicine, the official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics and part of the Nature group, suggest that these mutations predispose the body to early formations of tumours and chemotherapy toxicity.

In the article, lead author Massimo Bogliolo from the CIBERER research group led by Jordi Surrallés analysed biallelic mutations in the FANCM gene in three individuals. Despite the low number of in similar studies, the early onset of cancer and toxicity to chemotherapy is notable. But the patients did not present any congenital malformations or any haematological phenotype that could sugges Fanconi anaemia, a rare disease affecting one out of every 100,000 children. Until now, it was believed that the FANCM gene was related to this disease, as the biallelic mutation was observed in patients suffering from Fanconi anaemia in 2005.

In another article published in the same volume of the journal, researchers from Dr Surrallés' group and the research group led by Javier Benítez at the CNIO and the CIBERER confirmed that women with biallelic mutations in the FANCM gene did not develop Fanconi anaemia, but did present a higher risk of breast cancer, chemotherapy toxicity and chromosomal fragility.

"Until now, it was thought that biallelic mutations in the FANCM gene caused Fanconi anaemia, but we have now demonstrated that it is not so, given that in the two studies, there were eight patients with these mutations and none of them had anaemia," says Jordi Surrallés. However, the patients had developed cancer at very early ages, and also presented chemotherapy toxicity. Therefore, in view of the new syndrome, the authors recommend modifying the clinical monitoring of patients with biallelic mutations in the FANCM gene and taking precautions when using chemotherapy and radiation therapies due to the acute toxicity they may produce.

Genetic Complementation Test

For the study, the researchers conducted functional complementation tests, mass sequencing analyses in which there are several mutated and it is not clear which ones are the source of the disease. The patient's cells have a clear phenotype of chemical hypersensitivity to DEB, an agent that causes damage to DNA. In contrast, when a healthy FANCM gene copy was transferred into the cells of patients with the help of a virus (using lentiviral transductions), researchers observed the reversal of this phenotype and cells behaving as if they were healthy (a response similar to that of a healthy donor). This functional study is the genetic demonstration that the gene causing the disease is FANCM, and therefore, the observed in this gene are of a pathogenic nature.

More information: Massimo Bogliolo et al. Biallelic truncating FANCM mutations cause early-onset cancer but not Fanconi anemia, GENETICS in MEDICINE (2017). DOI: 10.1038/gim.2017.124

Journal information: Genetics in Medicine
Citation: Discovery of a new genetic syndrome that predisposes the body to cancer (2017, September 22) retrieved 18 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-09-discovery-genetic-syndrome-predisposes-body.html
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