A cryptic paracentric inversion of MSH2 exons 2-6 causes Lynch syndrome

We present a 38-year-old male with a clinicopathological and family history consistent with Lynch syndrome, including loss of MSH2 expression in his tumor. Germline testing revealed normal MSH2 coding sequence, splice sites and exon copy number, however, cDNA sequencing identified an aberrant MSH2 transcript lacking exons 2–6. An inversion PCR on germline DNA identified an ~18kb unbalanced, paracentric inversion within MSH2, with breakpoints in a long terminal repeat in intron 1 and an Alu repeat in intron 6. The 3' end of the inversion had a 1.2 kb deletion and an 8 bp insertion at the junction with intron 6. Screening of 55 additional Australian patients presenting with MSH2-deficient tumors who were negative in germline genetic tests for MSH2 mutations identified another inversion-positive patient. We propose an Alu-mediated recombination model to explain the origin of the inversion. Our study illustrates the potential value of cDNA screening to identify patients with cryptic MMR gene rearrangements, clarifies why standard testing may not detect some pathogenic alterations, and provides a genetic test for screening individuals with suspected Lynch syndrome that present with unexplained MSH2-deficient tumors.
Source: Carcinogenesis - Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Tags: Original Manuscript Source Type: research