E-cadherin (CDH1) is expressed on the cell surface in most epithelial tissues [
1,
2], and evidence is rapidly accumulating that the mammalian
E-cadherin gene product plays a role in epithelial tumourigenesis [
3]. Loss of function in E-cadherin and/or other collaborating proteins contributes to increased proliferation, invasion and metastasis in many malignant epithelial tumours [
22,
23]. Mutations in
E-cadherin, which encodes a transmembrane protein, have been described in cancers of the endometrium and ovary [
11], signet ring cell carcinoma of the stomach [
24,
25], the diffuse sclerosing variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma [
26], invasive lobular breast cancer [
5,
19,
27,
28], and diffuse and mixed gastric cancer [
24,
28,
29,
30].
E-cadherin germline mutations have been found in early-onset hereditary diffuse gastric cancer [
12,
14,
16], and such mutations have even been implicated as risk factors for early-onset breast and colon cancers [
13,
15]. Inactivating mutations and decreased expression of
E-cadherin have been reported in invasive lobular breast carcinomas [
5,
19], which demonstrate involvement of
E-cadherin alteration in sporadic lobular breast cancer. Lobular carcinoma
in situ is known to be a risk factor for breast cancer, but thus far constitutional
E-cadherin mutations have not been identified in patients with lobular carcinoma
in situ [
18]. In sporadic breast cancer, a correlation between loss of
E-cadherin expression and metastatic behaviour has been reported [
4,
31,
32,
33]. Despite the fact that
E-cadherin expression is decreased in 50% of invasive ductal carcinomas [
4], mutations in the coding sequence of
E-cadherin have not been observed in this type of breast cancer [
5,
6].
A role of
E-cadherin mutation in development of hereditary gastric cancer has been shown, but its role in predisposing to breast cancer is still unproved. In order to further explore the involvement of
E-cadherin in breast cancer, we examined all 16 exons of
E-cadherin in 31 familial breast cancer patients in whom involvement of
BRCA1 and
BRCA2 had been excluded [
7,
8,
9]. Twelve of these breast cancer patients (from 10 families) had, besides a family history of breast cancer, a family history of gastric or colorectal cancer. The remaining 19 familial breast cancer patients were identified as having LOH at 16q in their tumour [
34]. LOH at 16q occurs frequently in sporadic [
35] and in familial breast cancer [
10]. It has also been shown to correlate with distant metastasis [
34,
36]. In the familial breast cancer patients in whom LOH at 16q was identified,
E-cadherin was suggested to be a candidate predisposing tumour suppressor gene [
34], and the aim of the present study was to elucidate this relation.
In a previous study in a family with diffuse gastric and colon cancer (Salahshor S, et al, manuscript submitted), we found an E-cadherin germline mutation that cosegregated with the disease. This missense mutation in exon 12 (Ala592Thr) was also detected in the index patient's mother, who had ductal breast cancer. In an attempt to clarify a possible role of the Ala592Thr alteration in predisposing to breast cancer, we screened for this specific alteration in different series of breast cancer patients and control individuals. In total, 1328 patients with sporadic or familial breast cancer and 497 control individuals were tested for this specific alteration.