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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (breast cancer)
160,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Most cancers appear to be sporadic. However, 5 to 10% of cancers occur in genetically predisposed individuals. This inherited genetic risk is observed in syndromes such as familial polyendocrinopathies or phacomatosis such as neurofibromatosis, but also in familial aggregations of frequent cancers such as breast or colon cancers. Thanks to studies on molecular genetics, it has been possible over the last ten years to localize and to identify a large number of predisposing genes. These discoveries have permitted to better understand the biological basis of the predisposition and to offer counselling by identifying at-risk individuals in those families. In the case of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 associated with an elevated risk for medullary thyroid cancer, the gene involved is a protooncogene named RET and located on chromosome 10. Point mutations affecting specific regions of this gene are the basis of the genetic predisposition. For familial breast cancer, a susceptibility gene named BRCA1 has been located on the long arm of chromosome 17. Mutation of this gene (yet to be identified) led to very elevated risk of breast cancer and also in some families of ovarian cancer.
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PMID:[Genetic predisposition to cancer: familial forms of medullary thyroid cancer and breast cancer]. 803 90

Family history is recognized widely as a significant risk factor for the development of breast cancer. A gene (BRCA1), mutations in which confer susceptibility to early-onset breast and ovarian cancer, has been mapped to chromosome 17q12-21. An intensive search for this gene is currently underway in a number of laboratories. Recent data support the hypothesis that BRCA1 is a tumor suppressor gene that may be important in the development of both inherited and sporadic breast and ovarian cancers. Genetic and physical maps of the BRCA1 candidate region largely have been completed and efforts are being directed at identification of candidate genes from within this region. A small number of families recently have received results of genetic-linkage testing, indicating which family members likely are to be carriers of a germline BRCA1 mutation, and, therefore, have a lifetime risk of developing breast cancer of approximately 85%. The imminent isolation of BRCA1 will make predictive testing for breast cancer a reality for many women and likely will pave the way for novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies in the future.
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PMID:Familial breast cancer. Approaching the isolation of a susceptibility gene. 803 34

Breast cancer in men is about a hundredfold less common than in women and this has hindered research into its genetic basis. We have examined 22 families with at least one case of male breast cancer for linkage to the hereditary breast and ovarian cancer locus, BRCA1, on chromosome 17q. We found strong evidence against linkage to BRCA1 (lod score-16.63) and the best estimate of the proportion of linked families was 0% (95% CI 0-18%). Our results indicate that there is a gene(s) other than BRCA1 which predisposes to early-onset breast cancer in women and which confers a higher risk of male breast cancer. Identification of additional pedigrees that include cases of male breast cancer may therefore facilitate the mapping and isolation of this gene.
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PMID:Familial male breast cancer is not linked to the BRCA1 locus on chromosome 17q. 807 31

A small proportion of breast cancer, in particular those cases arising at a young age, is due to the inheritance of dominant susceptibility genes conferring a high risk of the disease. A genomic linkage search was performed with 15 high-risk breast cancer families that were unlinked to the BRCA1 locus on chromosome 17q21. This analysis localized a second breast cancer susceptibility locus, BRCA2, to a 6-centimorgan interval on chromosome 13q12-13. Preliminary evidence suggests that BRCA2 confers a high risk of breast cancer but, unlike BRCA1, does not confer a substantially elevated risk of ovarian cancer.
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PMID:Localization of a breast cancer susceptibility gene, BRCA2, to chromosome 13q12-13. 809 Dec 31

We have performed linkage analysis with five markers for the chromosome region 17q12-q21 in 13 Dutch breast cancer kindreds in order to find support for the claim by Hall et al. that a gene in this region, termed "BRCA1," is associated with predisposition to early-onset familial breast cancer. This work is part of a collaborative study, the results of which are published elsewhere in this issue. Best evidence for linkage was observed with the marker CMM86 (D17S74) in pedigrees with an average age at onset of < or = 47 years (LOD score = 1.77 at 1% recombination). In one breast-ovarian cancer family with a high probability of being linked to 17q, we observed one putative recombinant between D17S250 and D17S579, which suggests that BRCA1 is proximal to D17S579.
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PMID:Linkage to markers for the chromosome region 17q12-q21 in 13 Dutch breast cancer kindreds. 809 58

The isolation of genes that predispose to familial disease is an important goal in cancer research. The identification of such genes "opens up" the possibility of genetic diagnosis in families so that individuals who are at risk of cancer through inheriting a predisposing mutation can be identified. Genes that are involved in familial cancer syndromes may also be important in the pathogenesis of sporadic forms of the disease, which are often more common. In the search for genes that predispose to familial breast and ovarian cancer much recent progress has been made. A locus on the long arm of chromosome 17, in the interval 17q12-21, has been identified by genetic linkage, and appears to be responsible for disease in approximately 40% of breast cancer families and most families that contain breast and ovarian cancer. The region containing this locus, which has been called BRCA1, has been narrowed to a 3-4 cM interval defined by THRA1, the thyroid hormone receptor locus alpha, and D17S183, an anonymous microsatellite polymorphism. Loci other than BRCA1 that have been identified appear not only to predispose to breast and/or ovarian tumors, but to tumors at other sites too. A new locus has been identified on chromosome 2 which is linked to hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC). Families with HNPCC are also at risk of endometrial cancer and tumors of the ovary, amongst other cancer sites. Finally, mutations in the p53 gene are inherited in families with Li-Fraumeni syndrome, a rare cancer syndrome predisposing to breast tumors, sarcomas, leukemia and other cancers. Li-Fraumeni syndrome is also the only inherited cancer syndrome that predisposes at least in part to breast cancer where the actual predisposing gene is known. For the other cancer syndromes, the cloning of the predisposing genes is eagerly awaited.
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PMID:Predisposing genes in breast and ovarian cancer: an overview. 811 68

Chromosome 17q21 harbors a gene (BRCA1) associated with a hereditary form of breast cancer. As a step toward identification of this gene itself we developed a number of simple-sequence-repeat (SSR) markers for chromosome 17 and constructed a high-resolution genetic map of a 40-cM region around 17q21. As part of this effort we captured genotypes from five of the markers by using an ABI sequencing instrument and stored them in a locally developed database, as a step toward automated genotyping. In addition, YACs that physically link some of the SSR markers were identified. The results provided by this study should facilitate physical mapping of the BRCA1 region and isolation of the BRCA1 gene.
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PMID:Genetic mapping of the BRCA1 region on chromosome 17q21. 811 21

A locus on chromosome 17q, designated "BRCA1," has been identified as a predisposition gene for breast cancer. A panel of chromosome 17-specific radiation-reduced somatic cell hybrid clones has been assembled for high-resolution mapping of chromosome 17. A series of 35 markers, known to span the BRCA1 locus, were tested against this hybrid panel by PCR assays. Statistical analysis of these data yields a BRCA1 radiation hybrid map at a density sufficient to initiate YAC cloning and pulsed-field gel electrophoretic mapping of the candidate region. In addition, many of the markers reveal genetic polymorphisms and may be tested in breast cancer families and in loss-of-heterozygosity studies of sporadic breast cancers to better define the BRCA1 gene candidate region.
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PMID:A radiation hybrid map of the BRCA1 region. 811 22

17 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17HSD) is one of the key enzymes in estrogen metabolism, catalyzing the reversible reaction between estradiol and the less active estrogen, estrone. The gene encoding this enzyme, EDH17B2, has been mapped to chromosome 17, region q12-q21, in the vicinity of BRCA1, as as yet unidentified gene that appears to be involved in familial breast cancer and in familial ovarian cancer. The possibility that EDH17B2 gene is the same as BRCA1 was tested by screening for mutations in the coding regions of EDH17B2, using a polymerase chain reaction/single-strand conformation polymorphism method. An A-->G transition creating a new BstUI site at exon 6 was the only frequent sequence alteration found in the coding region of the gene. This mutation also led to an amino acid substitution of serine to glycine at position 312 (312S-->312G) in the 17HSD protein. Since the nucleotide change was detected both in specimens from patients with familial or sporadic cancer and in control samples, and at similar rates, this mutation appears to be of a polymorphic nature. In addition, a rare polymorphism located at intron 5 was detected. This C-->T substitution creates a BbvI site and is not thought to have any effect on 17HSD activity. The results indicate that there are no major alterations in the coding areas of EDH17B2 and thus studies testing the hypothesis that EDH17B2 may be the same as BRCA1 should be extended to the promoter and regulatory elements of EDH17B2.
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PMID:Human familial and sporadic breast cancer: analysis of the coding regions of the 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 2 gene (EDH17B2) using a single-strand conformation polymorphism assay. 812 84

The hereditary breast cancer gene BRCA1 previously has been localized to chromosome 17q21. We looked for evidence of involvement of this region of chromosome 17 in 130 sporadic breast cancers. Seventeen polymorphic sequence tagged site markers were examined in these tumors between the D17S250 and D17S579 loci to screen for deletions as measured by loss of heterozygosity. The smallest common region that was deleted occurred in the approximately 120-kilobase interval between the D17S846 and D17S746 loci within the BRCA1 region. Delineation of this commonly deleted area should accelerate attempts to identify the involved gene(s) and its relationship to BRCA1.
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PMID:Evidence for involvement of BRCA1 in sporadic breast carcinomas. 816 77


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