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Dive into the research topics where Mervi Grip is active.

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Featured researches published by Mervi Grip.


Nature | 2007

A recurrent mutation in PALB2 in Finnish cancer families

Hannele Erkko; Bing Xia; Jenni Nikkilä; Johanna Schleutker; Kirsi Syrjäkoski; Arto Mannermaa; Anne Kallioniemi; Katri Pylkäs; Sanna Maria Karppinen; Katrin Rapakko; Alexander Miron; Qing Sheng; Guilan Li; Henna Mattila; Daphne W. Bell; Daniel A. Haber; Mervi Grip; Mervi Reiman; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Aki Mustonen; Juha Kere; Lauri A. Aaltonen; Veli-Matti Kosma; Vesa Kataja; Ylermi Soini; Ronny Drapkin; David M. Livingston; Robert Winqvist

BRCA1, BRCA2 and other known susceptibility genes account for less than half of the detectable hereditary predisposition to breast cancer. Other relevant genes therefore remain to be discovered. Recently a new BRCA2-binding protein, PALB2, was identified. The BRCA2–PALB2 interaction is crucial for certain key BRCA2 DNA damage response functions as well as its tumour suppression activity. Here we show, by screening for PALB2 mutations in Finland that a frameshift mutation, c.1592delT, is present at significantly elevated frequency in familial breast cancer cases compared with ancestry-matched population controls. The truncated PALB2 protein caused by this mutation retained little BRCA2-binding capacity and was deficient in homologous recombination and crosslink repair. Further screening of c.1592delT in unselected breast cancer individuals revealed a roughly fourfold enrichment of this mutation in patients compared with controls. Most of the mutation-positive unselected cases had a familial pattern of disease development. In addition, one multigenerational prostate cancer family that segregated the c.1592delT truncation allele was observed. These results indicate that PALB2 is a breast cancer susceptibility gene that, in a suitably mutant form, may also contribute to familial prostate cancer development.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2006

Nordic collaborative study of the BARD1 Cys557Ser allele in 3956 patients with cancer: enrichment in familial BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation-negative breast cancer but not in other malignancies

Sanna-Maria Karppinen; Rosa B. Barkardottir; Katja Backenhorn; Thomas Sydenham; Kirsi Syrjäkoski; Johanna Schleutker; Tarja Ikonen; Katri Pylkäs; Katrin Rapakko; Hannele Erkko; Gudrun Johannesdottir; Anne-Marie Gerdes; Mads Thomassen; Bjarni A. Agnarsson; Mervi Grip; Anne Kallioniemi; Juha Kere; Lauri A. Aaltonen; Adalgeir Arason; Pål Møller; Torben A. Kruse; Åke Borg; Robert Winqvist

Background: BARD1 was originally identified as a BRCA1-interacting protein but has also been described in tumour-suppressive functions independent of BRCA1. Several studies have indicated that the BARD1 gene is a potential target for germline changes predisposing to breast and ovarian cancer. The C-terminal Cys557Ser change has previously been uncovered to associate with an increased risk of breast cancer and was recently shown to result in defective apoptotic activities. Aim and methods: Conformation-sensitive gel electrophoresis, minisequencing, TaqMan assays, denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography analysis and DNA sequencing were used to investigate the prevalence of the Cys557Ser allele in a large Nordic case–control study cohort consisting of 2906 patients with breast or ovarian cancer, 734 with prostate cancer, 188 with colorectal cancer, 128 men with breast cancer, and 3591 controls from Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Results: The frequency of the BARD1 Cys557Ser variant seemed to increase among patients from families with breast or ovarian cancer lacking BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations: a significant difference was obtained compared with controls (6.8% v 2.7%; p<0.001; odds ratio (OR) 2.6; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.7 to 4.0) and with patients from BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation-positive families (6.8% v 2.2%; p = 0.01; OR 3.2; 95% CI 1.2 to 8.3). In contrast, no major association with male breast, ovarian, colorectal or prostate cancer was observed. Additionally, a novel BARD1 allele resulting in Ser558Pro was identified in familial breast cancer cases. Conclusion: These results provide further evidence that BARD1 Cys557Ser confers a slightly increased risk of breast cancer in women.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing Identifies a Recurrent Mutation in MCPH1 Associating with Hereditary Breast Cancer Susceptibility.

Tuomo Mantere; Robert Winqvist; Saila Kauppila; Mervi Grip; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Anna Tervasmäki; Katrin Rapakko; Katri Pylkäs

Breast cancer is strongly influenced by hereditary risk factors, a majority of which still remain unknown. Here, we performed a targeted next-generation sequencing of 796 genes implicated in DNA repair in 189 Finnish breast cancer cases with indication of hereditary disease susceptibility and focused the analysis on protein truncating mutations. A recurrent heterozygous mutation (c.904_916del, p.Arg304ValfsTer3) was identified in early DNA damage response gene, MCPH1, significantly associating with breast cancer susceptibility both in familial (5/145, 3.4%, P = 0.003, OR 8.3) and unselected cases (16/1150, 1.4%, P = 0.016, OR 3.3). A total of 21 mutation positive families were identified, of which one-third exhibited also brain tumors and/or sarcomas (P = 0.0007). Mutation carriers exhibited significant increase in genomic instability assessed by cytogenetic analysis for spontaneous chromosomal rearrangements in peripheral blood lymphocytes (P = 0.0007), suggesting an effect for MCPH1 haploinsufficiency on cancer susceptibility. Furthermore, 40% of the mutation carrier tumors exhibited loss of the wild-type allele. These findings collectively provide strong evidence for MCHP1 being a novel breast cancer susceptibility gene, which warrants further investigations in other populations.


PLOS ONE | 2016

RAD51B in Familial Breast Cancer

Liisa M. Pelttari; Sofia Khan; Mikko Vuorela; Johanna I. Kiiski; Sara Vilske; Viivi Nevanlinna; Salla Ranta; Johanna Schleutker; Robert Winqvist; Anne Kallioniemi; Thilo Dörk; Natalia Bogdanova; Jonine D. Figueroa; Paul Pharoah; Marjanka K. Schmidt; Alison M. Dunning; Montserrat Garcia-Closas; Manjeet K. Bolla; Joe Dennis; Kyriaki Michailidou; Qin Wang; John L. Hopper; Melissa C. Southey; Efraim H. Rosenberg; Peter A. Fasching; Matthias W. Beckmann; Julian Peto; Isabel dos-Santos-Silva; Elinor Sawyer; Ian Tomlinson

Common variation on 14q24.1, close to RAD51B, has been associated with breast cancer: rs999737 and rs2588809 with the risk of female breast cancer and rs1314913 with the risk of male breast cancer. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of RAD51B variants in breast cancer predisposition, particularly in the context of familial breast cancer in Finland. We sequenced the coding region of RAD51B in 168 Finnish breast cancer patients from the Helsinki region for identification of possible recurrent founder mutations. In addition, we studied the known rs999737, rs2588809, and rs1314913 SNPs and RAD51B haplotypes in 44,791 breast cancer cases and 43,583 controls from 40 studies participating in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC) that were genotyped on a custom chip (iCOGS). We identified one putatively pathogenic missense mutation c.541C>T among the Finnish cancer patients and subsequently genotyped the mutation in additional breast cancer cases (n = 5259) and population controls (n = 3586) from Finland and Belarus. No significant association with breast cancer risk was seen in the meta-analysis of the Finnish datasets or in the large BCAC dataset. The association with previously identified risk variants rs999737, rs2588809, and rs1314913 was replicated among all breast cancer cases and also among familial cases in the BCAC dataset. The most significant association was observed for the haplotype carrying the risk-alleles of all the three SNPs both among all cases (odds ratio (OR): 1.15, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.11–1.19, P = 8.88 x 10−16) and among familial cases (OR: 1.24, 95% CI: 1.16–1.32, P = 6.19 x 10−11), compared to the haplotype with the respective protective alleles. Our results suggest that loss-of-function mutations in RAD51B are rare, but common variation at the RAD51B region is significantly associated with familial breast cancer risk.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Case-control analysis of truncating mutations in DNA damage response genes connects TEX15 and FANCD2 with hereditary breast cancer susceptibility

Tuomo Mantere; Anna Tervasmäki; Anna Nurmi; Katrin Rapakko; Saila Kauppila; Jiangbo Tang; Johanna Schleutker; Anne Kallioniemi; Jaana M. Hartikainen; Arto Mannermaa; Pentti Nieminen; Riitta Hanhisalo; Sini Lehto; Maija Suvanto; Mervi Grip; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Maria Tengström; Päivi Auvinen; Anders Kvist; Åke Borg; Carl Blomqvist; Kristiina Aittomäki; Roger A. Greenberg; Robert Winqvist; Heli Nevanlinna; Katri Pylkäs

Several known breast cancer susceptibility genes encode proteins involved in DNA damage response (DDR) and are characterized by rare loss-of-function mutations. However, these explain less than half of the familial cases. To identify novel susceptibility factors, 39 rare truncating mutations, identified in 189 Northern Finnish hereditary breast cancer patients in parallel sequencing of 796 DDR genes, were studied for disease association. Mutation screening was performed for Northern Finnish breast cancer cases (n = 578–1565) and controls (n = 337–1228). Mutations showing potential cancer association were analyzed in additional Finnish cohorts. c.7253dupT in TEX15, encoding a DDR factor important in meiosis, associated with hereditary breast cancer (p = 0.018) and likely represents a Northern Finnish founder mutation. A deleterious c.2715 + 1G > A mutation in the Fanconi anemia gene, FANCD2, was over two times more common in the combined Finnish hereditary cohort compared to controls. A deletion (c.640_644del5) in RNF168, causative for recessive RIDDLE syndrome, had high prevalence in majority of the analyzed cohorts, but did not associate with breast cancer. In conclusion, truncating variants in TEX15 and FANCD2 are potential breast cancer risk factors, warranting further investigations in other populations. Furthermore, high frequency of RNF168 c.640_644del5 indicates the need for its testing in Finnish patients with RIDDLE syndrome symptoms.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2013

The UGT1A6_19_GG genotype is a breast cancer risk factor

Christina Justenhoven; Ofure Obazee; Stefan Winter; Sylvia Rabstein; Anne Lotz; Volker Harth; Beate Pesch; Thomas Brüning; Christian Baisch; Jaana M. Hartikainen; Arto Mannermaa; Veli-Matti Kosma; Vesa Kataja; Robert Winqvist; Katri Pylkäs; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Mervi Grip; Peter A. Fasching; Matthias Beckmann; Arif B. Ekici; Alexander Hein; Per Hall; Jingmei Li; Jenny Chang-Claude; Dieter Flesch-Janys; Petra Seibold; Anja Rudolph; Ute Hamann; Yon-Dschun Ko; Hiltrud Brauch

Validation of an association between the UGT1A6_19_T>G (rs6759892) polymorphism and overall breast cancer risk. A pilot study included two population-based case-control studies from Germany (MARIE-GENICA). An independent validation study comprised four independent breast cancer case-control studies from Finland (KBCP, OBCS), Germany (BBCC), and Sweden (SASBAC). The pooled analysis included 7418 cases and 8720 controls from all six studies. Participants were of European descent. Genotyping was done by MALDI-TOF MS and statistical analysis was performed by logistic regression adjusted for age and study. The increased overall breast cancer risk for women with the UGT1A6_19_GG genotype which was observed in the pilot study was confirmed in the set of four independent study collections (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.05–1.22; p = 0.001). The pooled study showed a similar effect (OR 1.09, 95% CI 1.04–1.14; p = 0.001). The risk effect on the basis of allele frequencies was highly significant, the pooled analysis showed an OR of 1.11 (95% CI 1.06–1.16; p = 5.8 × 10−6). We confirmed the association of UGT1A6_19_GG with increased overall breast cancer risk and conclude that our result from a well powered multi-stage study adds a novel candidate to the panel of validated breast cancer susceptibility loci.


International Journal of Cancer | 2018

Rare missense mutations in RECQL and POLG associate with inherited predisposition to breast cancer: Breast cancer risk alleles in RECQL & POLG

Anna Tervasmäki; Tuomo Mantere; Jaana M. Hartikainen; Saila Kauppila; Hang-Mao Lee; Susanna Koivuluoma; Mervi Grip; Peeter Karihtala; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Arto Mannermaa; Robert Winqvist; Katri Pylkäs

Several known breast cancer susceptibility genes with moderate‐to‐high risk alleles encode proteins involved in DNA damage response (DDR). As these explain less than half of the hereditary breast cancer cases, additional predisposing alleles are likely to be discovered. Many of the previous studies utilizing massive parallel sequencing have focused on the protein‐truncating variants, and the role of rare missense mutations has remained poorly addressed. To identify novel susceptibility factors, we have systematically analyzed the data from our parallel sequencing of 796 DDR genes in 189 Northern Finnish hereditary breast cancer patients for rare missense variants, predicted as deleterious. Thirty‐five variants were studied here for the disease association using Finnish breast cancer case (n = 492–2,035) and control (n = 277–1,539) cohorts. As a result, two missense variants in genes involved in DNA replication, RECQL p.I156M and POLG p.L392V, the former involving genomic and the latter mitochondrial DNA replication, showed significant association with risk of breast cancer. Rare RECQL p.I156M allele was observed in breast cancer cases only (6/1,946, 0.3%, p = 0.043), whereas POLG p.L392V was two times more frequent in breast cancer cases (53/2,238, 2.4%) compared to controls (18/1,539, 1.2%, OR = 2.1, 95% CI 1.2–3.5, p = 0.010). Based on the current genetic data, both RECQL p.I156M and POLG p.L392V represent novel breast cancer predisposing alleles.


Human Genetics | 2016

Genetic variation in the immunosuppression pathway genes and breast cancer susceptibility: a pooled analysis of 42,510 cases and 40,577 controls from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium.

Jieping Lei; Anja Rudolph; Kirsten B. Moysich; Sabine Behrens; Ellen L. Goode; Manjeet K. Bolla; Joe Dennis; Alison M. Dunning; Douglas F. Easton; Qin Wang; Javier Benitez; John L. Hopper; Melissa C. Southey; Marjanka K. Schmidt; Annegien Broeks; Peter A. Fasching; Lothar Haeberle; Julian Peto; Isabel dos-Santos-Silva; Elinor Sawyer; Ian Tomlinson; Barbara Burwinkel; Frederik Marme; Pascal Guénel; Thérèse Truong; Stig E. Bojesen; Henrik Flyger; Sune F. Nielsen; Børge G. Nordestgaard; Anna González-Neira


Archive | 2018

Rare missense mutations in RECQL and POLG associate with inherited predisposition to breast cancer

Anna Tervasmäki; Tuomo Mantere; Jaana M. Hartikainen; Salla Kauppila; Hang-Mao Lee; Susanna Koivuluoma; Mervi Grip; Peeter Karihtala; Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen; Arto Mannermaa; Robert Winqvist; Katri Pylkäs


Archive | 2015

Genetic variation in the immunosuppression pathway genes and breast cancer: a pooled analysis of 42,510 cases and 40,577 controls from the Breast

Jieping Lei; Anja Rudolph; Kirsten B. Moysich; Sabine Behrens; Ellen L. Goode; M.K. Bolla; Joe Dennis; Alison Margaret Dunning; Douglas F. Easton; Qin Wang; Javier Benitez; John L. Hopper; Melissa C. Southey; Marjanka K. Schmidt; Annegien Broeks; Peter A. Fasching; Lothar Haeberle; Julian Peto; Isabel dos-Santos-Silva; Elinor Sawyer; Ian Tomlinson; Barbara Burwinkel; Frederik Marme; Pascal Guénel; Thérèse Truong; Stig E. Bojesen; Henrik Flyger; Sune F. Nielsen; Børge G. Nordestgaard; Anna González-Neira

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Arto Mannermaa

University of California

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Jaana M. Hartikainen

University of Eastern Finland

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