4.5 Article

Drastic Effect of Germline TP53 Missense Mutations in LiFraumeni Patients

Journal

HUMAN MUTATION
Volume 34, Issue 3, Pages 453-461

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/humu.22254

Keywords

TP53; LiFraumeni syndrome; mutation; transcriptome

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In contrast to other tumor suppressor genes, the majority of TP53 alterations are missense mutations. We have previously reported that in the LiFraumeni syndrome (LFS), germline TP53 missense mutations are associated with an earlier age of tumor onset. In a larger series, we observed that mean age of tumor onset in patients harboring dominant negative missense mutations and clearly null mutations was 22.6 and 37.5 years, respectively. To assess the impact of heterozygous germline TP53 mutations in the genetic context of the patients, we developed a new functional assay of the p53 pathway on the basis of induction of DNA damage in EpsteinBarr-virus-immortalized lymphocytes, followed by comparative gene-expression profiling. In wild-type lymphocytes, we identified a core of 173 genes whose expression was induced more than twofold, of which 46 were known p53 target genes. In LFS lymphocytes with canonical missense mutations, the number of induced genes and the level of known p53 target genes induction were strongly reduced as compared with controls and LFS lymphocytes with null mutations. These results show that certain germline missense TP53 mutations, such as those with dominant negative effect, dramatically alter the response to DNA damage. This probably explains why TP53 alterations are predominantly missense mutations.

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