Literature DB >> 19089452

Identification of genomic regions contributing to etoposide-induced cytotoxicity.

Wasim K Bleibel1, Shiwei Duan, R Stephanie Huang, Emily O Kistner, Sunita J Shukla, Xiaolin Wu, Judith A Badner, M Eileen Dolan.   

Abstract

Etoposide is routinely used in combination-based chemotherapy for testicular cancer and small-cell lung cancer; however, myelosuppression, therapy-related leukemia and neurotoxicity limit its utility. To determine the genetic contribution to cellular sensitivity to etoposide, we evaluated cell growth inhibition in Centre d' Etude du Polymorphisme Humain lymphoblastoid cell lines from 24 multi-generational pedigrees (321 samples) following treatment with 0.02-2.5 microM etoposide for 72 h. Heritability analysis showed that genetic variation contributes significantly to the cytotoxic phenotypes (h (2) = 0.17-0.25, P = 4.9 x 10(-5)-7.3 x 10(-3)). Whole genome linkage scans uncovered 8 regions with peak LOD scores ranging from 1.57 to 2.55, with the most significant signals being found on chromosome 5 (LOD = 2.55) and chromosome 6 (LOD = 2.52). Linkage-directed association was performed on a subset of HapMap samples within the pedigrees to find 22 SNPs significantly associated with etoposide cytotoxicity at one or more treatment concentrations. UVRAG, a DNA repair gene, SEMA5A, SLC7A6 and PRMT7 are implicated from these unbiased studies. Our findings suggest that susceptibility to etoposide-induced cytotoxicity is heritable and using an integrated genomics approach we identified both genomic regions and SNPs associated with the cytotoxic phenotypes.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19089452      PMCID: PMC2714550          DOI: 10.1007/s00439-008-0607-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Genet        ISSN: 0340-6717            Impact factor:   4.132


  37 in total

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5.  Heritability and linkage analysis of sensitivity to cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity.

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6.  Pedigree tests of transmission disequilibrium.

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  27 in total

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Review 7.  Role of PRMTs in cancer: Could minor isoforms be leaving a mark?

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8.  A mouse PRMT1 null allele defines an essential role for arginine methylation in genome maintenance and cell proliferation.

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9.  A genome-wide association analysis of temozolomide response using lymphoblastoid cell lines shows a clinically relevant association with MGMT.

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10.  Gemcitabine and arabinosylcytosin pharmacogenomics: genome-wide association and drug response biomarkers.

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