CAG Repeat Variants in the POLG1 Gene Encoding mtDNA Polymerase-Gamma and Risk of Breast Cancer in African-American Women

The DNA polymerase-gamma (POLG) gene, which encodes the catalytic subunit of enzyme responsible for directing mitochondrial DNA replication in humans, contains a polyglutamine tract encoded by CAG repeats of varying length. The length of the CAG repeat has been associated with the risk of testicular cancer, and other genomic variants that impact mitochondrial function have been linked to breast cancer risk in African-American (AA) women. We evaluated the potential role of germline POLG-CAG repeat variants in breast cancer risk in a sample of AA women (100 cases and 100 age-matched controls) who participated in the Women's Circle of Health Study, an ongoing multi-institutional, case-control study of breast cancer. Genotyping was done by fragment analysis in a blinded manner. Results from this small study suggest the possibility of an increased risk of breast cancer in women with minor CAG repeat variants of POLG, but no statistically significant differences in CAG repeat length were observed between cases and controls (multivariate-adjusted odds ratio 1.74; 95% CI, 0.49–6.21). Our study suggests that POLG-CAG repeat length is a potential risk factor for breast cancer that needs to be explored in larger population-based studies.

[1]  Ruifang Niu,et al.  Reduced mitochondrial DNA copy number is correlated with tumor progression and prognosis in Chinese breast cancer patients , 2007, IUBMB life.

[2]  A. Tsezou,et al.  Association of repeat polymorphisms in the estrogen receptors alpha, beta (ESR1, ESR2) and androgen receptor (AR) genes with the occurrence of breast cancer. , 2008, Breast.

[3]  Z. Hall Cancer , 1906, The Hospital.

[4]  H. Valdimarsdottir,et al.  Conducting Molecular Epidemiological Research in the Age of HIPAA: A Multi-Institutional Case-Control Study of Breast Cancer in African-American and European-American Women , 2009, Journal of oncology.

[5]  D. Barton,et al.  Mutations at the mitochondrial DNA polymerase (POLG) locus associated with male infertility , 2001, Nature Genetics.

[6]  Keshav K. Singh,et al.  Mutations in mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ promote breast tumorigenesis , 2009, Journal of Human Genetics.

[7]  Sonja W. Scholz,et al.  POLG1 polyglutamine tract variants associated with Parkinson's disease , 2010, Neuroscience Letters.

[8]  F. Foury,et al.  Analysis of the trinucleotide CAG repeat from the human mitochondrial DNA polymerase gene in healthy and diseased individuals , 1999, European Journal of Human Genetics.

[9]  S. Hosseinkhani,et al.  Association between trinucleotide CAG repeats of the DNA polymerase gene (POLG) with age of onset of Iranian Friedreich’s ataxia patients , 2008, Neurological Sciences.

[10]  C. Perou,et al.  Race, breast cancer subtypes, and survival in the Carolina Breast Cancer Study. , 2006, JAMA.

[11]  Janghoo Lim,et al.  Opposing effects of polyglutamine expansion on native protein complexes contribute to SCA1 , 2008, Nature.

[12]  H. Leffers,et al.  Frequent polymorphism of the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma gene (POLG) in patients with normal spermiograms and unexplained subfertility. , 2004, Human reproduction.

[13]  R. Naviaux,et al.  POLG mutations in Alpers syndrome , 2005, Neurology.

[14]  C. Ambrosone,et al.  Breast cancer in African-American women: differences in tumor biology from European-American women. , 2006, Cancer research.

[15]  Tom Walsh,et al.  Ten genes for inherited breast cancer. , 2007, Cancer cell.

[16]  H. Leffers,et al.  Association of the polymorphism of the CAG repeat in the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma gene (POLG) with testicular germ-cell cancer. , 2008, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[17]  I. Skoneczna,et al.  CAG repeat polymorphism in the DNA polymerase gamma gene in a Polish population: an association with testicular cancer risk. , 2005, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[18]  J. Goudsmit,et al.  Lack of correlation between length variation in the DNA polymerase gamma gene CAG repeat and lactic acidosis or neuropathy during antiretroviral treatment. , 2002, AIDS research and human retroviruses.