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Microsatellite Instability (MSI) and Mutation Detection in HNPCC

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Title: Mutation Detection in HNPCC Author: Dr Wallis Last modified by: cytojxb Created Date: 2/5/2006 4:47:22 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microsatellite Instability (MSI) and Mutation Detection in HNPCC


1
Microsatellite Instability (MSI) and Mutation
Detection in HNPCC
  • Jennie Bell
  • West Midlands Regional Genetics Service

2
Overview
  • Introduction to HNPCC and MSI
  • Current strategies
  • Impact on mutation detection of MSI and IHC

3
Contribution of familial cancer syndromes to
colorectal cancer
Lynch Cancer100, No1,2004
4
Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
Thousands of polyps in colon
Certain to become malignant by fourth decade
Prevention of cancer depends on regular
sigmoidoscopy
Molecular testing can be used to indicate those
requiring clinical screening
5
Extracolonic manifestations
Congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigment
epithelium (CHRPE)
Upper GI adenomas
Desmoid tumour
Epidermoid cysts
Osteomas
6
The APC gene
Cabrera CM, López-Nevot MA. APC and chromosome
instability in colorectal cancer. Rev Esp Enferm
Dig 2005 97 738-743.
7
Adenoma-Carcinoma Sequence
Renata dos Santos Coura Arq. Gastroenterol. vol.42
 no.2  São Paulo Apr./June 2005
8
FAP vs HNPCC
9
HNPCC
  • Characterised on the basis of family pedigree -
    not on clinical grounds alone
  • Termed the Amsterdam criteria
  • One person affectedlt50
  • At least two generations involved
  • One person must be first degree relative of
    another
  • FAP must be excluded

10
HNPCC
  • Early onset of colorectal cancer- fifth and sixth
    decade
  • Associated with a range of other cancers
    including endometrial cancer, transitional cell
    carcinomas

11
Mismatch Repair Genes
  • Phenotype is caused by at least 5 different genes
  • MSH2 (16 exons)
  • MLH1 (19 exons)
  • PMS 2 (and ?1)
  • MSH6
  • MSH3

12
Mismatch repair
The EMBO Journal (1998) 17, 64276436
13
Microsatellite instability (MSI)
  • Comparison of normal with tumour DNA
  • 7 microsatellite markers
  • Additional peaks recorded as unstable
  • gt30 markers unstable MSI-High
  • lt30 markers unstable MSI-Low

14
Example of MSI
Tumour DNA
Normal DNA
15
White Paper (2004)
  • Funding for 0.5 WTE for post in Department of
    Cellular Pathology at University of Birmingham
    Medical School for 2 years
  • Impact has been outstanding
  • MSI and IHC service working smoothly for last 12
    months

16
Integration of MSI/IHC with Mutation Detection
Blocks returned
Dept. Cell. Pathol
Mutation screen
other path lab
Blocks sent
Blocks cut IHC
Request for blocks
Genetics Lab
Clinical Genetics
IHC/Amsterdam pos
IHC/Amsterdam neg
Sections for MSI
MSI positive
MSI negative
17
Mutation detection
  • Two genes analysed
  • hMLH1 19 exons
  • hMSH2 16 exons
  • hMSH6 in development
  • Point mutations (missense, nonsense, splice site)
  • Small insertions and deletions
  • Large deletions and duplications

18
Automation Developments (2005)
  • Sequence based analysis using robotics
  • 2 x Beckman NX, 1 x Beckman FX
  • 2 x ABI 3730 genetic analysers
  • Mutation detection software (Mutation Surveyor)
  • MLPA

19
Mutation analysis
Sample received
report
Del/dup identified
MLPA
Del/dup not identified
Mutation identified
Mutation not identified
Sequence all exons
report
report
presymptomatic testing available
presymptomatic testing not available
20
Mutation screening 2002 - 2005
  • 270 patients screened by a combination of dHPLC,
    sequencing and MLPA
  • 90 mutations reported
  • Mutation detection rate approx 35

21
Automated strategy Results since Jan 06
  • 98 patients screened
  • 39 variants identified
  • 40 detection rate

22
Contribution of Gene Mutations
23
Positions of mutations identified
hMSH2
24
hMLH1
25
Summary of identified variants
Nature of variant No. identified (n/39)
Del/Dup 6 15
Nonsense/frameshift 9 23
Splice 11 28
Missense 11 28
Intronic variants 2 5
26
Reporting times
  • MSI
  • 4 weeks (once sections cut)
  • Mutation screen
  • within 8 weeks

27
Relationship between MSI/IHC and Mutation
Screening
624 screened
135 MSI ve
489 MSI neg
18 Mutation not identified
40 Mutation identified
77 Status unknown
28
How does MSI/IHC help?
  • Patient 1
  • Missense p.Lys618Ala identified (exon 16 MLH1) by
    SSCP
  • Unclear pathogenic significance
  • Not able to offer presymptomatic testing to the
    family
  • MSI and IHC undertaken to gain further
    information

29
  • Tumour tissue exhibited MSI and loss of MSH2
    antibody staining
  • Repeat mutation screen by dHPLC
  • Identified frameshift mutation in exon 1 of MSH2
  • Clearly pathogenic
  • Presymptomatic testing available

30
How does MSI/IHC help?
  • Increasing information on MSI IHC status
  • Can give supporting evidence to interpretation of
    missense variants
  • Identification of more mutations through
    screening more appropriate families

31
Presymptomatic testing
  • Aim of mutation screening is provide
    presymptomatic testing to at risk individuals
  • Use of MSI and IHC along with pedigree
    information targets appropriate families
  • Improved efficiency of mutation detection

32
Presymptomatic testing
33
The future of mutation detection
  • Functional assays to define effect of missense
    variants
  • RNA analysis to identify sequence variants within
    introns and exons that affect splicing machinery
  • MSI and IHC will focus this analysis to
    appropriate families
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