Hnpcc & Fap - Similarities & Differences

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HNPCC & FAP – SIMILARITIES & DIFFERENCES Elaine Whitfield

Transcript of Hnpcc & Fap - Similarities & Differences

Page 1: Hnpcc & Fap - Similarities & Differences

HNPCC & FAP – SIMILARITIES & DIFFERENCES

Elaine Whitfield

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Colon Cancer

• Colon cancer is the third most common form of cancer and the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the Western world & causes 655,000 deaths worldwide per year.

• Lifetime risk in UK is 1 in 30 • Hereditary in 5-10% of cases • HNPCC causes 5% of all colorectal cancer• FAP causes 1% of all colorectal cancer

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Disease Characteristics

• HNPCC• Germline mutation in

mismatch repair genes• Assoc with MSI• AD with reduced penetrance

~80% lifetime risk of colon cancer

• ↑risk of endometrial, ovary, stomach cancer

• Ave age of diagnosis = 50s• Polyps rarely seen• Slow tumour initiation & rapid

progression

• FAP• Germline mutation in APC

gene – Tumour suppressor• Assoc with LOH• AD fully penetrant ~100%

lifetime risk of colon cancer if untreated

• CHRPE & soft tissue & desmoid tumours

• Ave age of diagnosis = 39• 100s – 1000s polyps• Rapid tumour initiation and

slow progression

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Inheritance & Genes Responsible

• HNPCC• Autosomal dominant inheritance with reduced

penetrance (80% colon, 60% endometrial lifetime risk)• Genes mutated – MSH2 (60%), MLH1 (30%), MSH6

(5%) & PMS1 & PMS2 (<2%) – all genes involved in DNA mis-match repair, found on various chromosomes

• 100s mutations identified (233 in MLH1 – majority point mutations esp. missense, nonsense & splicing)

• Cause cancer by allowing more mutations to accumulate

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Inheritance & Genes Responsible

• FAP• Autosomal dominant inheritance with ~100% penetrance of

colon cancer without surgery• Gene mutated- APC (Adenomatous Polyposis Coli) gene –

tumour suppressor gene 5q22• Many different mutation identified – most truncating (80%)• LOH for APC adenoma (cells partially escape cell cycle

control & divide adenoma), require further mutations in oncogene such as RAS late adenoma, then DCC mutation late stage adenoma, then p53 mutation cancer

• APC mutations also recessive at the cellular level

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Normal Protein Function• HNPCC

• Mismatch repair pathway proteins• Identify and remove single nucleotide mismatches or

insertion and deletion loops• At least 5 proteins involved four of which can cause

HNPCC (MSH3 not involved in HNPCC)• Mlh1 dimerises with Pms2 to co-ordinate binding of

other proteins• Msh2 forms a heterodimer with either Msh6 or Msh3

which identifies the mismatches – clamp model

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Normal Protein Function• FAP

• APC protein product is a tumour suppressor • APC forms a complex with glycogen synthase kinase

3b (GSK-3b) which targets β-catenin a protein involved in cell adhesion & signalling

• APC protein maintains normal apoptosis and may decrease cell proliferation through its regulation of β -catenin

• Abnormal APC leads to high levels of cytosolic β -catenin which binds to transcription factors and may activate oncogenes

• Also contributes to chromosome stability

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Disease Diagnosis

•HNPCC• Diagnosis – Amsterdam II criteria

–3+ relatives with HNPCC related cancers (1 who is a 1st degree)

–2 successive generation affected–1+ diagnosed <50 yrs–Exclusion of FAP–78 % sensitivity

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Disease Identification & Progression - MSI• HNPCC

• Microsatellite Instability (MSI) or molecular testing required for accurate diagnosis

• Bethesda guidelines developed to identify individuals whose tumours are candidates for MSI

• MSI – microsatellites are particularly susceptible to acquiring errors when mismatch repair gene function is impaired

• Panel of 5 markers used: MSI high = >30% show instability, MSI low <30% and MSI stable if 0% (more markers can be used) also RER+ or RER-

• Can perform MSI on polyp biopsy but limited material and slightly lower rate of MSI (different markers for different tissues) also lower MSI in endometrial carcinomas

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Microsatellite Instability

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Mutation Screening• HNPCC

• MLH1 & MSH2 account for 90% of mutations, MSH6 ~5%, PMS1 & PMS2 <2%

• Mutation scanning – DGGE, SSCP, dHPLC or direct sequencing. MLPA – up to 5% MLH1 & 20% MSH2 mutations are deletions

• Targeted sequencing if familial mutation known or if belong to ethnic group characterised by high frequency of founder mutations (Finnish, Danish, Ashkenazi)

• Mutation specific database search to investigate pathogenicity of sequence variation detected

• Immunohistochemical analysis of mismatch repair proteins in tumour can determine which gene is involved in the pathogenesis by detecting protein expression – use as first screen?

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Disease Diagnosis

• FAP

• Clinically diagnosed in an individual with >100 colorectal adenomatous polyps or <100 polyps and a relative with FAP

• Other clinically diagnostic criteria – CHRPE, soft tissue tumours, desmoid tumours

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Molecular Diagnosis

• FAP• Full gene sequencing will detect ~90% mutations• Del / Dup ~10% - MLPA• ~80% of mutations are truncating so can use PTT for

mutation scanning• Hypermethylation of APC promoter – additional

mechanism• Immunohistochemical assessment of APC protein

expression to detect APC status regardless of mechanism of gene inactivation – also suitable for archival tumour material

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Loss of Heterozygosity• Relies on individual being heterozygous for markers close to

APC locus & comparison between normal & tumour tissue

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Genotype-Phenotype Correlations

• HNPCC

• MSH2 mutations greater risk for extracolonic tumours

• MSH6 tumours – low MSI, later age of onset

• FAP• Intra-familial variation

depending on location of mutation

• 5’ & 3’ & exon 9 mutations = Attenuated FAP (fewer polyps & later age of onset)

• Codon 1309 earlier age and more polyps

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HNPCC Variants• Muir-Torre – colon cancer & sebaceous skin

neoplasms – MSH2 mutations more common than MLH1

• Turcot syndrome – colorectal cancer in addition to tumours of central nervous system (can be due to MMR gene – MLH1/ PMS2 or APC gene mutation)

• Early-onset haematological malignancy, brain tumours, HNPCC-associated tumours, and signs of neurofibromatosis type 1– homozygous MMR gene mutation – MLH1, MSH2 PMS2 – carrier consanginous parents

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FAP Variants

• Attenuated FAP – fewer polyps, later age of onset

• Turcot syndrome

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Monitoring and Treatment

• HNPCC• Colonoscopy every one to two years from age

of 20-25 or ten years before earliest diagnosis in family

• If colon cancer detected full colectomy is recommended

• Prophylactic removal of the uterus and ovaries may be considered after childbearing is complete

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Monitoring and Treatment

• FAP• Sigmoidoscopy (less invasive than

colonoscopy) every one to two years from age ten to twelve

• Annual colonoscopy once polyps detected

• Colectomy once 20 to 30 adenomas have occurred

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MYH- Associated Polyposis• Phenotypically similar to FAP and attenuated FAP

but inherited in Autosomal Recessive manner• MYH MutY human homologue gene – chr 1p32.1-

34.3• Occassionally biallelic mutations found in

individuals with no polyps• If no APC mutation is detected in FAP consider

MYH – analysis of pedigree consistent with AR inheritance?

• 1/50 carrier frequency - ?increased risk for carriers• Important for counselling purposes as siblings at

25% risk, whereas FAP & HNPCC 50% risk to all first degree relatives

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MYH- Associated Polyposis• MYH protein is a base excision repair glycosylase

involved in the repair of DNA damage• If MYH is dysfunctional can cause mutations in APC

& KRAS• Dutch study of 170 CC patients found MYH mutations

in 24% of APC & HNPCC mutation negative patients referred for testing

• All mutations point mutations, no rearrangements detected by Southern blotting

• High level of breast cancer in females – 18%, significantly higher than Dutch population risk – BRCA1 & 2 also involved in base excision repair

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Additional References• European Journal of Human Genetics (2008) 16, 62–72;

Kruger et al Homozygous PMS2 germline mutations in two families with early-onset haematological malignancy, brain tumours, HNPCC-associated tumours, and signs of neurofibromatosis type 1

• Clinical Chemistry 49:4 552–561 (2003) Bonk et al Matrix-assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry-based Detection of Microsatellite Instabilities in Coding DNA Sequences: A Novel Approach to Identify DNA-Mismatch Repair-deficient Cancer Cells

• Gene Tests