Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Germline BAP1 inactivation is preferentially associated with metastatic ocular melanoma and cutaneous-ocular melanoma families

  • Ching Ni Jenny Njauw
  • , Ivana Kim
  • , Adriano Piris
  • , Michele Gabree
  • , Michael Taylor
  • , Anne Marie Lane
  • , Margaret M. DeAngelis
  • , Evangelos Gragoudas
  • , Lyn M. Duncan
  • , Hensin Tsao
  • Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Massachusetts Eye and Ear
  • Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

231 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: BAP1 has been shown to be a target of both somatic alteration in high-risk ocular melanomas (OM) and germline inactivation in a few individuals from cancer-prone families. These findings suggest that constitutional BAP1 changes may predispose individuals to metastatic OM and that familial permeation of deleterious alleles could delineate a new cancer syndrome. Design: To characterize BAP1's contribution to melanoma risk, we sequenced BAP1 in a set of 100 patients with OM, including 50 metastatic OM cases and 50 matched non-metastatic OM controls, and 200 individuals with cutaneous melanoma (CM) including 7 CM patients from CM-OM families and 193 CM patients from CM-non-OM kindreds. Results: Germline BAP1 mutations were detected in 4/50 patients with metastatic OM and 0/50 cases of non-metastatic OM (8% vs. 0%, p = 0.059). Since 2/4 of the BAP1 carriers reported a family history of CM, we analyzed 200 additional hereditary CM patients and found mutations in 2/7 CM probands from CM-OM families and 1/193 probands from CM-non-OM kindreds (29% vs. 0.52%, p =. 003). Germline mutations co-segregated with both CM and OM phenotypes and were associated with the presence of unique nevoid melanomas and highly atypical nevoid melanoma-like melanocytic proliferations (NEMMPs). Interestingly, 7/14 germline variants identified to date reside in C-terminus suggesting that the BRCA1 binding domain is important in cancer predisposition. Conclusion: Germline BAP1 mutations are associated with a more aggressive OM phenotype and a recurrent phenotypic complex of cutaneous/ocular melanoma, atypical melanocytic proliferations and other internal neoplasms (ie. COMMON syndrome), which could be a useful clinical marker for constitutive BAP1 inactivation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere35295
JournalPLOS ONE
Volume7
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 24 2012

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Germline BAP1 inactivation is preferentially associated with metastatic ocular melanoma and cutaneous-ocular melanoma families'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this