The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Molecular mechanism behind breast cancer

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MORE than 20 years after scientists revealed that mutations in the BRCA1 gene predispose women to breast cancer, Yale scientists (United States) have pinpointed the molecular mechanism that allows those mutations to wreak their havoc.

The findings, reported October 4 in the journal Nature, will not only help researcher­s design drugs to combat breast and ovarian cancers, but also help identify women who are at high risk of developing them, the authors say.

“There have been about 14 000 papers written about BRCA1, and you would think we already know everything about the gene, but we don’t,” said senior author Patrick Sung, professor of molecular biophysics and biochemist­ry and of therapeuti­c radiology and member of the Yale Cancer Centre.

The discovery of BRCA1’s role in DNA repair and suppressio­n of tumours was the first evidence that the risk of cancer could be inherited. It was originally thought that mutations in BRCA1 and the related BRCA2 gene might account for 7 percent to 8 percent of breast and ovarian cancers, Sung said.

However, the cancer risk is likely a lot higher because in many cancer cases the expression of the BRCA genes is silenced even though no mutation can be found, he added. Sung and colleagues showed in their Nature paper that the interactio­n of BRCA1 with its partner BARD1 is necessary to recruit the exact genetic sequence needed to repair breaks in DNA caused by endogenous stress and environmen­tal insults such as radiation exposure.

“Defining the mechanism of the BRCA-dependent DNA repair pathway will help scientists design drugs to kill cancer cells more efficientl­y,” Sung said.

“Understand­ing this mechanism will provide the predictive power for doctors trying to establish a patient’s personal risk of developing cancer.”

Weixing Zhao, an associate research scientist at Yale, is the leading and co-senior author of this study, which was primarily funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Other collaborat­ors include Yale faculty’s Gary Kupfer, Ryan Jensen and Yong Xiong, as well as Claudia Wiese of the Colorado State University and Eric Greene of Columbia University.

Primary funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health. SciTechDai­ly.

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