Truncating activating mutations in the last exon of PPM1D have been described in patients with breast, ovarian, colorectal and non-small cell lung cancer, but recent data indicate that they may be associated with previous chemotherapy. In this study we evaluated the prevalence of PPM1D mutations in white blood cells (WBC) of 462 patients with early-onset and/or familial/hereditary prostate cancer (PrCa) by sequencing the coding region of exon 6. Two truncating mutations were found in two patients (0.4%), both treated with androgen-ablation therapy but no chemotherapy prior to blood collection. Next generation sequencing analysis showed that the truncating variants were present in 21.4% and 32.4% of the reads, indicating that they were in mosaic in WBC, something that was confirmed by its absence in a different tissue from one of these patients. Additionally, nine patients (1.95%) were found to harbor non-synonymous germline mutations, with three patients sharing the same missense variant, c.1607G > A, p.Arg536Lys. This variant was predicted to be deleterious by different in silico tools and was not found in the 293 male control subjects tested. Large cohorts and/or functional evaluation are needed to clarify the nature of the truncating mosaic mutations in PrCa patients treated with and without androgen-ablation therapy and to evaluate the contribution of the recurrent missense variant to the risk of developing PrCa. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.