Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies, volume 3, issue 5, pages a001487

A germline FANCA alteration that is associated with increased sensitivity to DNA damaging agents

David C. Wilkes 1
Verena Sailer 2
Hui Jun Xue 3
Hongwei Cheng 3
Colin Collins 3
M.E. Gleave 3
Yuzhuo Wang 3
Francesca Demichelis 4
Himisha Beltran 5
Mark I. Rubin 1, 5
David S. Rickman 1, 5
Show full list: 11 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2017-05-03
scimago Q2
SJR0.801
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor1.8
ISSN23732873, 23732865
PubMed ID:  28864460
General Medicine
Abstract

Defects in genes involved in DNA damage repair (DDR) pathway are emerging as novel biomarkers and targets for new prostate cancer drug therapies. A previous report revealed an association between an exceptional response to cisplatin treatment and a somatic loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of FANCA in a patient with metastatic prostate cancer who also harbored a germline FANCA variant (S1088F). Although germline FANCA mutations are the most frequent alterations in patients with Fanconi anemia, germline alterations are less common in prostate cancer. We hypothesized that the germline S1088F FANCA variant in combination with FANCA LOH was deleterious for FANCA function and contributed to the patient's exceptional response to cisplatin. We show that although it properly localizes to the nucleus, the S1088F FANCA mutant protein disrupts the FANC protein complex resulting in increased sensitivity to DNA damaging agents. Because molecular stratification is emerging as a strategy for treating men with metastatic, castrate-resistant prostate cancer harboring specific DDR gene defects, our findings suggest that more biomarker studies are needed to better define clinically relevant germline and somatic alterations.

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