The APC Variant p.Glu1317Gln predisposes to colorectal adenomas by a novel mechanism of relaxing the target for tumorigenic somatic APC mutations
✍ Scribed by Anthony R. Dallosso; Siân Jones; Duncan Azzopardi; Valentina Moskvina; Nada Al-Tassan; Geraint T. Williams; Shelley Idziaszczyk; D. Rhodri Davies; Peter Milewski; Sally Williams; John Beynon; Julian R. Sampson; Jeremy P. Cheadle
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 253 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Multiple rare nonsynonymous variants in APC predispose to colorectal adenomas. The mechanisms through which such variants act have been unclear, but it has been proposed that a specific (''just-right'') level of b-catenin signaling is required for colorectal tumorigenesis. This appears to be mediated by selection for APC genotypes that retain one, or rarely two, 20 amino acid b-catenin downregulating repeats (20AARs). We investigated the mechanism through which the variant p.Glu1317Gln (c.3949G4C) contributes to colorectal tumorigenesis. We compared the patterns of somatic APC mutations in tumors from patients with attenuated familial adenomatous polyposis (AFAP) who did, or did not, coinherit p.Glu1317Gln with their AFAPcausing APC mutations. Only 8.2% (4/49) of tumors carrying p.Glu1317Gln had somatic mutations predicted to result in mutant polypeptides retaining a single 20AAR, compared to 62.1% (36/58) of those which did not carry this variant ( P 5 5.64 Â 10 À9 ). Furthermore, tumors with p.Glu1317Gln often carried somatic mutations that were unusually early or late (downstream of the second 20AAR) in the APC open reading frame. These data support a novel mechanism in which p.Glu1317Gln in combination with other weak mutant APC alleles (generating polypepetides with zero, two, or three 20AARs) can provide the necessary growth advantage for colorectal tumorigenesis.