A novel TP53 germ-line mutation identified in a girl with a primitive neuroectodermal tumor and her father

Cancer Genet Cytogenet. 1998 Sep;105(2):103-8. doi: 10.1016/s0165-4608(98)00015-6.

Abstract

A search of TP53 mutations was undertaken in a series of 51 pediatric brain tumors. The only germ-line mutation was detected in a 9-year-old girl with a PNET. Her family history was unremarkable for neoplastic disease, except for the paternal grandfather, who died of a gallbladder carcinoma at an advanced age. The mutation was a thymine deletion at the first base of codon 241, leading to termination codon at position 246 that has not previously been reported. This mutation was found to be inherited from the proband's father, who was healthy at age 40. In the tumoral sample, loss of heterozygosity in several 17p markers was found, the only TP53 allele preserved in the tumor was the mutated one. The presence of two short tandem repeats and two different palindromic sequences spanning the deletion lead us to propose the predisposition of this region to forming a complex secondary structure during replication. Consequently, it could have facilitated the present deletion. Furthermore, six other short deletions affecting--partially or totally--the region implicated in the folding model that we propose have been described in the literature. These findings confirm that this sequence represents a hotspot of deletion in the TP53 gene.

Publication types

  • Case Reports
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17
  • Female
  • Genes, p53*
  • Germ-Line Mutation*
  • Heterozygote
  • Humans
  • Lymphocytes / physiology
  • Male
  • Neuroectodermal Tumors, Primitive / complications
  • Neuroectodermal Tumors, Primitive / genetics*
  • Neuroectodermal Tumors, Primitive / therapy
  • Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational