Functional characterization of BRCA1 sequence variants using a yeast small colony phenotype assay

RS Coyne, HB McDonald, K Edgemon… - Cancer biology & …, 2004 - Taylor & Francis
RS Coyne, HB McDonald, K Edgemon, LC Brody
Cancer biology & therapy, 2004Taylor & Francis
Germline mutations that inactivate the tumor suppressor gene BRCA1 are associated with
an increased risk of cancers of the breast and other tissues, but the functional consequence
of many missense variants found in the human population is uncertain. Several predictive
methods have been proposed to distinguish cancer-predisposing missense mutations from
harmless polymorphisms, including a small colony phenotype (SCP) assay performed in the
model organism, yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). The goal of this study was to further …
Germline mutations that inactivate the tumor suppressor gene BRCA1 are associated with an increased risk of cancers of the breast and other tissues, but the functional consequence of many missense variants found in the human population is uncertain. Several predictive methods have been proposed to distinguish cancer-predisposing missense mutations from harmless polymorphisms, including a small colony phenotype (SCP) assay performed in the model organism, yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). The goal of this study was to further evaluate this colony size assay. We constructed 28 missense mutations throughout the C-terminal 305 amino acid residues of BRCA1. Mutated proteins were expressed in yeast and evaluated using the SCP assay. We conclude there is as yet no evidence the assay can identify inactivating mutations upstream of the BRCT repeats. However, within and between the BRCT repeats, results of the assay are in general agreement with predictions based on structural modeling, other in vitro and in vivo assays, and cross-species sequence conservation. Thus, the yeast assay appears to provide confirmatory in vivo evidence to aid in characterizing some BRCA1 missense variants.
Taylor & Francis Online