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EPCAM mutation update: Variants associated with congenital tufting enteropathy and Lynch syndrome.

Authors :
Pathak, Sagar J
Pathak, Sagar J
Mueller, James L
Okamoto, Kevin
Das, Barun
Hertecant, Jozef
Greenhalgh, Lynn
Cole, Trevor
Pinsk, Vered
Yerushalmi, Baruch
Gurkan, Odul E
Yourshaw, Michael
Hernandez, Erick
Oesterreicher, Sandy
Naik, Sandhia
Sanderson, Ian R
Axelsson, Irene
Agardh, Daniel
Boland, C Richard
Martin, Martin G
Putnam, Christopher D
Sivagnanam, Mamata
Pathak, Sagar J
Pathak, Sagar J
Mueller, James L
Okamoto, Kevin
Das, Barun
Hertecant, Jozef
Greenhalgh, Lynn
Cole, Trevor
Pinsk, Vered
Yerushalmi, Baruch
Gurkan, Odul E
Yourshaw, Michael
Hernandez, Erick
Oesterreicher, Sandy
Naik, Sandhia
Sanderson, Ian R
Axelsson, Irene
Agardh, Daniel
Boland, C Richard
Martin, Martin G
Putnam, Christopher D
Sivagnanam, Mamata
Source :
Human mutation; vol 40, iss 2, 142-161; 1059-7794
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The epithelial cell adhesion molecule gene (EPCAM, previously known as TACSTD1 or TROP1) encodes a membrane-bound protein that is localized to the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells and is overexpressed in some tumors. Biallelic mutations in EPCAM cause congenital tufting enteropathy (CTE), which is a rare chronic diarrheal disorder presenting in infancy. Monoallelic deletions of the 3' end of EPCAM that silence the downstream gene, MSH2, cause a form of Lynch syndrome, which is a cancer predisposition syndrome associated with loss of DNA mismatch repair. Here, we report 13 novel EPCAM mutations from 17 CTE patients from two separate centers, review EPCAM mutations associated with CTE and Lynch syndrome, and structurally model pathogenic missense mutations. Statistical analyses indicate that the c.499dupC (previously reported as c.498insC) frameshift mutation was associated with more severe treatment regimens and greater mortality in CTE, whereas the c.556-14A>G and c.491+1G>A splice site mutations were not correlated with treatments or outcomes significantly different than random simulation. These findings suggest that genotype-phenotype correlations may be useful in contributing to management decisions of CTE patients. Depending on the type and nature of EPCAM mutation, one of two unrelated diseases may occur, CTE or Lynch syndrome.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Human mutation; vol 40, iss 2, 142-161; 1059-7794
Notes :
application/pdf, Human mutation vol 40, iss 2, 142-161 1059-7794
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367412396
Document Type :
Electronic Resource