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Correlation of Phenotype/Genotype in a Cohort of 23 Xeroderma Pigmentosum-Variant Patients Reveals 12 New Disease-CausingPOLHMutations

Authors :
Emmanuelle Despras
Alain Sarasin
Jacques Armier
Nadem Soufir
Wei Yang
Christine Mateus
Caroline Pouvelle
Agnes Bourillon
Ludovic Martin
Caroline Robert
Patricia Kannouche
K. Opletalova
Source :
Human Mutation. 35:117-128
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2013.

Abstract

Xeroderma pigmentosum variant (XP-V) is a rare genetic disease, characterized by some sunlight sensitivity and predisposition to cutaneous malignancies. We described clinical and genetic features of the largest collection ever published of 23 XPV patients (ages between 21 and 86) from 20 unrelated families. Primary fibroblasts from patients showed normal nucleotide excision repair but UV-hypersensitivity in the presence of caffeine, a signature of the XP-V syndrome. 87% of patients developed skin tumors with a median age of 21 for the first occurrence. The median numbers of basal-cell carcinoma was 13 per patient, six for squamous-cell carcinoma, and five for melanoma. XP-V is due to defects in the translesion-synthesis DNA polymerase PolĪ· coded by the POLH gene. DNA sequencing of POLH revealed 29 mutations, where 12 have not been previously identified, leading to truncated polymerases in 69% of patients. Four missense mutations are correlated with the protein stability by structural modeling of the PolĪ· polymerase domain. There is a clear relationship between the types of missense mutations and clinical severity. For truncating mutations, which lead to an absence of or to inactive proteins, the life-cumulated UV exposure is probably the best predictor of cancer incidence, reinforcing the necessity to protect XP-Vs from sun exposure.

Details

ISSN :
10597794
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92d8d760102d5f5331120748c3ca8780
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.22462