Intragenic deletions and a deep intronic mutation affecting pre-mRNA splicing in the dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase gene as novel mechanisms causing 5-fluorouracil toxicity

Open Access
Authors
  • A.B.P. van Kuilenburg
  • J. Meijer
  • A.N.P.M. Mul
  • R. Meinsma
  • V. Schmid
  • D. Dobritzsch
  • R.C.M. Hennekam
  • M.M.A.M. Mannens
  • M. Kiechle
  • M.C. Etienne-Grimaldi
  • H.J. Klümpen
  • J.G. Maring
  • V.A. Derleyn
  • E. Maartense
  • G. Milano
  • R. Vijzelaar
  • E. Gross
Publication date 2010
Journal Human Genetics
Volume | Issue number 128 | 5
Pages (from-to) 529-538
Organisations
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) is the initial enzyme acting in the catabolism of the widely used antineoplastic agent 5-fluorouracil (5FU). DPD deficiency is known to cause a potentially lethal toxicity following administration of 5FU. Here, we report novel genetic mechanisms underlying DPD deficiency in patients presenting with grade III/IV 5FU-associated toxicity. In one patient a genomic DPYD deletion of exons 21-23 was observed. In five patients a deep intronic mutation c.1129-5923C > G was identified creating a cryptic splice donor site. As a consequence, a 44 bp fragment corresponding to nucleotides c.1129-5967 to c.1129-5924 of intron 10 was inserted in the mature DPD mRNA. The deleterious c.1129-5923C > G mutation proved to be in cis with three intronic polymorphisms (c.483 + 18G > A, c.959-51T > G, c.680 + 139G > A) and the synonymous mutation c.1236G > A of a previously identified haplotype. Retrospective analysis of 203 cancer patients showed that the c.1129-5923C > G mutation was significantly enriched in patients with severe 5FU-associated toxicity (9.1%) compared to patients without toxicity (2.2%). In addition, a high prevalence was observed for the c.1129-5923C > G mutation in the normal Dutch (2.6%) and German (3.3%) population. Our study demonstrates that a genomic deletion affecting DPYD and a deep intronic mutation affecting pre-mRNA splicing can cause severe 5FU-associated toxicity. We conclude that screening for DPD deficiency should include a search for genomic rearrangements and aberrant splicing
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-010-0879-3
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