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Citations to this article

Breast cancer gene variants: separating the harmful from the harmless
Susan M. Domchek, Roger A. Greenberg
Susan M. Domchek, Roger A. Greenberg
Published September 21, 2009
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2009;119(10):2895-2897. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40577.
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Commentary Article has an altmetric score of 14

Breast cancer gene variants: separating the harmful from the harmless

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Abstract

Individuals carrying a mutation in the breast cancer 1, early onset gene (BRCA1) are at increased risk of breast or ovarian cancer and thus are candidates for risk reduction strategies such as oophorectomy and mastectomy. A recurring problem in the clinic is that many detectable changes within the BRCA1 gene produce subtle alterations to the protein that are not easily recognized as either harmful (loss-of-function) alleles or harmless and thus inconsequential polymorphisms. In this issue of the JCI, Chang, Sharan, and colleagues describe a novel system to evaluate human BRCA1 alleles for in vivo function using BACs containing human BRCA1 vectors in mouse cells and embryos (see the related article beginning on page 3160). This strategy should provide new avenues for clinicians to interpret results of genetic testing of BRCA1 variants and for researchers to study the basic molecular mechanisms of BRCA1 function in in vivo model systems.

Authors

Susan M. Domchek, Roger A. Greenberg

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Total citations by year

Year: 2022 2017 2016 2014 Total
Citations: 1 2 1 1 5
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal. Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive. Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article, and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources (for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).

Citations to this article (5)

Title and authors Publication Year
BRCA1 gene polymorphism and finger dermatoglyphic patterns in Ghanaian breast cancer patients: a quantitative cross-sectional approach
Nkansah EO, Ahenkorah J, Adutwum-Ofosu K, Adjei RL, Adu-Aryee NA, Tagoe EA, Koney NK, Aryee NA, Hottor BA, Blay RM, Clegg-Lamptey JN, Arko-Boham B
The Pan African medical journal 2022
Mutational analysis of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes in Peruvian families with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer
J Buleje, M Guevara-Fujita, O Acosta, FD Huaman, P Danos, A Murillo, JA Pinto, JM Araujo, A Aguilar, J Ponce, C Vigil, C Castaneda, G Calderon, HL Gomez, R Fujita
Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine 2017
Next-generation sequencing of BRCA1/2 in breast cancer patients: potential effects on clinical decision-making using rapid, high-accuracy genetic results
HS Park, SJ Park, JY Kim, S Kim, J Ryu, J Sohn, S Park, GM Kim, IS Hwang, JR Choi, SI Kim
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2017
Systematic Functional Interrogation of Rare Cancer Variants Identifies Oncogenic Alleles
E Kim, N Ilic, Y Shrestha, L Zou, A Kamburov, C Zhu, X Yang, R Lubonja, N Tran, C Nguyen, MS Lawrence, F Piccioni, M Bagul, JG Doench, CR Chouinard, X Wu, L Hogstrom, T Natoli, P Tamayo, H Horn, SM Corsello, K Lage, DE Root, A Subramanian, TR Golub, G Getz, JS Boehm, WC Hahn
Cancer Discovery 2016
BRCA1 polymorphism in breast cancer patients from Argentina
O Jaure, E Alonso, D Braico, A Nieto, M Orozco, C Morelli, A Ferro, E Barutta, E Vincent, D Mart�nez, I Mart�nez, M Maegli, A Frizza, R Kowalyzyn, M Salvadori, P Ginestet, MG Donna, G Balogh
Oncology Letters 2014

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