Objective To review the research progress in relationship between hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC) and CDH1 gene. Methods Literatures on HDGC which were published in recent years were collected and analyzed. Results Aberrant CDH1 gene is significantly correlated with HDGC: mutations of CDH1 exons play the most important role in pathogenesis of HDGC. Screening CDH1 gene mutation is useful for diagnosis of HDGC as well as the treatments. Alterations of CDH1 other than exon mutation, such as intron mutation, gene promoter methylation and single nucleotide polymorphism may result in downregulation of the gene expression. Further study should be done to confirm the roles of these alterations. Conclusions Alterations of CDH1 gene are significantly associated with the pathogenesis of HDGC. Detecting alterations of CDH1 gene are important for diagnosis and management of HDGC as well as to get insights of the pathogenesis of the disease.
ObjectiveTo identify the causative gene in a family affected with Usher syndrome (USH) with retinitis pigmentosa sine pigmento (RPSP) and to analyze the genotype-phenotype correlation.MethodsA retrospective clinical study. A 9-year-old girl with RPSP type 1F USH diagnosed in the ophthalmology clinic of Henan Provincial People's Hospital in November 2019 and her parents were included in the study. The patient had bilateral night blindness for more than 4 years, she suffered from hearing loss 7 years, and is currently binaural sensorineural deafness. The best corrected visual acuity in both eyes was 0.5+. There was showed no obvious pigmentation on the fundus. The visual acuity of the peripheral field of vision decreased. Optical coherence tomography showed that the outer layer of the peripheral retina became thinner and the ellipsoid band disappeared. On electroretinogram examination, the rod and cone system response was severely decreased. The clinical phenotype of the parents of the child were normal. The peripheral venous blood of the child and his parents were extracted, the whole genome DNA was extracted, the custom developed targeted capture kit (PS400) was used, and the next-generation sequencing technology was used to detect genetic mutations. The suspected pathogenic mutation sites were verified by Sanger; co-segregation was performed among family members. The pathogenicity of variants were evaluated according to the interpretation standards and guidelines of sequence variants. Bioinformatics techniques were used to assess the impact of variants on encoded proteins.ResultsThe results of genetic testing showed that the proband detected the PCDH15 gene c.4109dupA (p.K1370fs) (M1), c.17dupA (p.Y6_L7delinsX) (M2) compound heterozygous mutation sites, verified by Sanger sequencing, the mutations were in the family in a state of co-segregation. According to the evaluation of sequence variation interpretation standards and guidelines, M1 and M2 were pathogenic variants of the PCDH15 gene. M1 led to a complete change in the transmembrane structure of the encoded protein, and M2 caused the gene to only translate 6 amino acids, which predicted that the PCDH15 protein cannot be synthesized. According to the clinical phenotype, gene mutation pathogenicity and protein structure prediction, the final clinical diagnosis was PCDH15-related type 1F.ConclusionsPCDH15 genes c.4109dupA and c.17dupA are the pathogenic mutation sites of USH in this family. These compound heterozygous new mutations lead to the failure of normal synthesis of PCDH15 protein, which leads to ocular and ear manifestations.
ObjectiveTo determine the level of CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in human gastric carcinoma by establishing MS-PCR method, and analyze retrospectively the possible statistical relationship between CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in human gastric carcinoma and HP infection, tumor differentiation, invasion, lymph nodal and distant metastasis, respectively. MethodsThe bisulfite conversion MS-PCR method was adopted to examine the level of CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in 40 cases of human gastric carcinoma tissue collected between January 2008 and December 2009. The statistical relationship between CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in human gastric carcinoma and HP infection, tumor differentiation, invasion, lymph nodal and distant metastasis were examined respectively with SPSS statistical tools. ResultsThe positive rate of CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in gastric carcinomas (67.5%) was higher than that in paired normal gastric mucosae (12.5%), and the difference was significant (P<0.05). In gastric carcinomas, the positive rate of CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in well differentiated or moderately differentiated groups (22.2%) was lower than that in poorly differentiated groups (80.6%), and the difference was significant (P<0.05). The positive rate of CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation in HP positive groups (78.1%) was higher than that in HP negative groups (25.0%), and the difference was significant (P<0.05). ConclusionCDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation may play an important role in the process of tumor carcinogenesis in gastric carcinomas. Meanwhile, the CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation may lead to poor differentiation in gastric carcinomas. CDH1 gene promoter hypermethylation is related to HP infection in the original gastric carcinomas, which shows that HP may get involved in the process of tumor suppressor gene methylation/inactivation and tumor development process.