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Molecular analysis of de novo germline mutations in the von Hippel-Lindau disease gene
Authors:Richards, Frances M.   Payne, Stewart J.   Zbar, Berton   Affara, Nabeel A.   Ferguson-Smith, Malcolm A.   Maher, Eamonn R.
Affiliation:Cambridge University Department of Pathology, Tennis Court Road Cambridge CB2 1QP 1Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Addenbrooke's NHS Trust Cambridge, UK 2Laboratory of Immunobiology, National Cancer Institute Frederick, USA
Abstract:VHL disease is a dominantly inherited familial cancer syndromewith variable expression and age-dependent penetrance. The diagnosisof isolated cases is often delayed compared with familial cases,and estimates of the new mutation rate have varied more than20-fold. To investigate the frequency and origin of de novoVHL gene mutations we have analysed: (i) families with identicalmutations to determine if there is a common haplotype, and (ii)apparent new mutation cases to determine whether the clinicaldiagnosis of such cases is reliable and to define the parentalorigin of de novo VHL gene mutations. Haplotyping of 12 VHLmutations occurring in two or more families (total 42 kindreds)revealed that for most mutations there was no evidence of afounder effect. A marked bias for a paternal origin of new mutationshas been reported in other familial cancer syndromes such asneurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), multiple endocrine neoplasia(MEN) 2B and bilateral retinoblastoma, but it is unclear whetherthis bias results from a greater susceptibility for mutagenesisduring male gametogenesis because of the larger number of celldivisions compared with that in oogenesis, or from genomic imprintingeffects. Analysis of 13 de novo VHL mutations in which the parentof origin could be established, showed no evidence for a biasfor a paternal origin (seven paternal, six maternal), and differedsignificantly from that reported in NF1, MEN2B and bilateralretinoblastoma. This result demonstrates that an increased susceptibilityto paternal allele mutation is not a universal finding in autosomalgenetic diseases and that the origin of new mutations may beinfluenced by both genomic imprinting effects and the increasednumber of cell divisions in spermatogenesis compared with oogenesis.
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