Literature DB >> 26701879

Identification of new susceptibility loci for gastric non-cardia adenocarcinoma: pooled results from two Chinese genome-wide association studies.

Zhaoming Wang1,2,3, Juncheng Dai3, Nan Hu1, Xiaoping Miao4, Christian C Abnet1, Ming Yang5, Neal D Freedman1, Jinfei Chen6, Laurie Burdette1,2, Xun Zhu3, Charles C Chung1,2, Chuanli Ren3,7, Sanford M Dawsey1, Meilin Wang8, Ti Ding9, Jiangbo Du3, Yu-Tang Gao10, Rong Zhong4, Carol Giffen11, Wenting Pan5, Woon-Puay Koh12, Ningbing Dai3, Linda M Liao1, Caiwang Yan3, You-Lin Qiao13, Yue Jiang3, Xiao-Ou Shu14, Jiaping Chen3, Chaoyu Wang1, Hongxia Ma3, Hua Su1, Zhendong Zhang8, Lemin Wang1, Chen Wu15, Yong-Bing Xiang10, Zhibin Hu3, Jian-Min Yuan16, Lu Xie3, Wei Zheng14, Dongxin Lin15, Stephen J Chanock1, Yongyong Shi17, Alisa M Goldstein1, Guangfu Jin3, Philip R Taylor1, Hongbing Shen3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Although several genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of non-cardia gastric cancer have been published, more novel association signals could be exploited by combining individual studies together, which will further elucidate the genetic susceptibility of non-cardia gastric cancer.
DESIGN: We conducted a meta-analysis of two published Chinese GWAS studies (2031 non-cardia gastric cancer cases and 4970 cancer-free controls) and followed by genotyping of additional 3564 cases and 4637 controls in two stages.
RESULTS: The overall meta-analysis revealed two new association signals. The first was a novel locus at 5q14.3 and marked by rs7712641 (per-allele OR=0.84, 95% CI 0.80 to 0.88; p=1.21×10-11). This single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker maps to the intron of the long non-coding RNA, lnc-POLR3G-4 (XLOC_004464), which we observed has lower expression in non-cardia gastric tumour compared with matched normal tissue (Pwilcoxon signed-rank=7.20×10-4). We also identified a new signal at the 1q22 locus, rs80142782 (per-allele OR=0.62; 95% CI 0.56 to 0.69; p=1.71×10-19), which was independent of the previously reported SNP at the same locus, rs4072037 (per-allele OR=0.74; 95% CI 0.69 to 0.79; p=6.28×10-17). Analysis of the new SNP conditioned on the known SNP showed that the new SNP remained genome-wide significant (Pconditional=3.47×10-8). Interestingly, rs80142782 has a minor allele frequency of 0.05 in East Asians but is monomorphic in both European and African populations.
CONCLUSION: These findings add new evidence for inherited genetic susceptibility to non-cardia gastric cancer and provide further clues to its aetiology in the Han Chinese population. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.

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Keywords:  EPIDEMIOLOGY; GASTRIC CANCER; GENETIC POLYMORPHISMS

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26701879      PMCID: PMC4963301          DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2015-310612

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gut        ISSN: 0017-5749            Impact factor:   23.059


Approximately 40% of all cases of gastric cancer worldwide occur in China, and this form of cancer remains one of the key public health issues in cancer prevention and control. Several previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of gastric cancer have reported several associations for common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Combining together studies of moderate sample sizes will increase statistical power, so more novel signals can be exploited. Based on a GWAS meta-analysis approach to pool two published Chinese GWAS, and followed by two-stage replications (more than 10 000 samples), we identified two novel signals associated with the risk of non-cardia gastric cancer. The first one rs7712641 maps to the intron of the long non-coding RNA, lnc-POLR3G-4 (XLOC_004464). Further analysis showed that rs7712641 had significantly lower expression in non-cardia gastric tumour compared with matched normal tissue. In addition, we observed a new signal marked by rs80142782 at the 1q22 locus. It was independent of the previously reported SNP rs4072037 and is a common SNP in East Asians but is monomorphic in both European and African populations.

Introduction

Globally, gastric cancer remains the third-leading cause of cancer death in both sexes,1 with more than half of gastric cancer cases worldwide occurring in East Asia, predominantly in China. Most cases of gastric cancer are sporadic,2 and its aetiology is related to both genetic susceptibility and epidemiological risk factors3 such as age, sex, Helicobacter pylori infection,4 5 family history, excessive salt intake and tobacco smoking. Anatomically, gastric cancer is classified into cardia gastric cancer and non-cardia gastric cancer, which are characterised by distinct risk factors and clinical features.4 6–8 Recently, several genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of gastric adenocarcinoma were conducted in East Asians.9–12 Notable findings include single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers mapping to 8q24.3, for both an intronic SNP (rs2976392) and an exonic SNP (rs2294008) in the Prostate Stem Cell Antigen gene (PSCA); and two markers rs2075570 and rs2070803 near the Mucin 1 gene (MUC1) on 1q22.9 The findings on 1q22 locus and gastric cancer risk were further replicated in several follow-up studies and additional evidence pointed to the non-synonymous SNP, rs4072037, as the functional variant underlying the observed association.13–18 In addition, 3q13.31 marked by rs9841504, 5p13.1 marked by rs13361707 or rs10074991 and 6p21.1 marked by rs2294693 were reported to be associated with non-cardia gastric adenocarcinoma in China,11 12 whereas 10q23 marked by rs2274223, a non-synonymous SNP located in PLCE1, was associated with cardia but not non-cardia gastric cancer.10 Together, these data indicate that five chromosomal regions, 1q22, 3q13.31, 5p13.1, 6p21.1 and 8q24.3, have strong evidence of harbouring one or more susceptibility alleles of non-cardia gastric cancer. Based on the experience of other cancer sites, additional loci will likely be found by interrogation of increasingly larger studies.

Materials and methods

Primary GWAS scan data

For the National Cancer Institute (NCI) GWAS, subjects were drawn from four prospective cohort studies and one large case–control study as reported in Abnet et al.10 In addition, all subjects used in replication in the original paper were subsequently genotyped using the Illumina 660W-Quad microarray; this included scanning of 725 additional gastric cancer cases and 608 additional controls. The current analysis included all 1025 non-cardia gastric cancer cases and 2697 controls from the NCI Upper Gastrointestinal Cancer GWAS. For the Nanjing and Beijing GWAS, individuals were derived from separate case–control studies conducted in Nanjing (565 cases and 1162 controls) and Beijing (468 cases and 1123 controls), as previously reported in Shi et al,11 where individuals were genotyped using the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array (V.6.0).

Replication samples

The first-stage replication including 1145 cases and 2253 controls were derived from Jiangsu Province. The second-stage replication included 2419 cases and 2384 controls, which were derived from Beijing, Hubei and Shandong province. Gastric cancer cases tested for expression of the lncRNA associated with the GWAS SNPs came from our UGI Cancer Genetic Studies (URL: http://dceg.cancer.gov/about/staff-directory/biographies/O-Z/taylor-philip). Genotypes for all these cases are known because they were also all participants in our previous GWAS.10 All study individuals provided informed consent and both the institutional review boards of NCI and Nanjing Medical University approved all procedures and all experiments, which were conducted in accordance with the approved guidelines.

Genotype imputation

In addition to the quality control procedures performed in the previous primary publications for previous GWAS, SNPs with call rate of <95%, p value for Hardy–Weinberg Equilibrium (HWE) in controls ≤1.0×10−6 or minor allele frequency (MAF) of <1% in controls were further removed before imputation. Imputation was conducted separately for the NCI (Illumina 660W) and the Nanjing+Beijing (Affymetrix 6.0) scan data taking all populations in the 1000 Genomes Project Phase I (V.3) as the reference set and using IMPUTE2 software (V.2.2.2), which automatically finds haplotypes from the best matching population from the entire reference set to do the imputation. First, genomic coordinates for National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) human genome Build 36 were converted to those of NCBI human genome Build 37 using the UCSC liftOver tool. The few loci for which coordinates could not be converted were also excluded from imputation. Second, the strand of the inference data was aligned with the 1000 Genomes Project data by simple allele state comparison or allele frequency matching for adenine/thymine (A/T) and guanine/cytosine (G/C) SNPs. We implemented a 4 Mb sliding window to impute across the genome, resulting in 744 windows. A pre-phasing strategy with SHAPEIT software (V.2) was adopted to improve the imputation performance. The phased haplotypes from SHAPEIT were fed directly into IMPUTE2.

SNP selection and replication genotyping

The meta-analysis included 6 223 896 SNPs based on the intersection of the three imputed datasets. Individual SNPs for the stage 2A replication were selected based on the following criteria: (1) SNPs with INFO score of ≥0.5; (2) MAF in control set ≥0.01; (3) p value for HWE in control set >1.0×10−4 in each set; (4) Phet >1.0×10−4 and I2 <75% in meta-analysis; (5) linkage disequilibrium (LD) pruning: included only one SNP with the lowest p value when the pair-wise r2 ≥0.3 within a distance of 200 kb; (6) exclusion of previously identified loci associated with risk for non-cardia gastric cancer. After applying the above criteria, we then picked the top 48 SNPs (Pmeta≤2.58×10−5). For 1q22 and 8q24, there were two SNPs (rs80142782; rs76845414) retained in our LD filtered list, so we included back two more SNPs (rs4072037; rs2294008) previously reported for each of these regions in order to search for potential secondary signals for these two known loci to derive an initial list of 50 SNPs. Subsequently, 13 SNPs failed either Sequenom assay design or genotyping studies. As a result, a total of 37 SNPs (see online supplementary table S2) were successfully genotyped using iPLEX Sequenom MassARRAY platform (Sequenom, California, USA) in stage 2A replication (1145 cases and 2253 controls). Five SNPs with p <0.05 in stage 2A without significant heterogeneity (Phet>1.0×10−4 and I2<75%) were advanced for TaqMan assays (Applied Biosystems) in stage 2B replication (2419 cases and 2384 controls) (see online supplementary table S3). Further information on primers and probes are available on request. For quality control purposes: (1) case and control samples were mixed on each plate; (2) genotyping was performed blind to case/control status and (3) two water controls were used in each plate as blank controls.

Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR

Total RNA was extracted from each patient's matched frozen tumour and normal surgical resection tissues using All Prep DNA/RNA/Protein kit (QIAGEN) in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. RNA quality and quantity were determined using the RNA Nano Chip/Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies). Reverse transcription of RNA was done by adding 0.2–2 µg total RNA, 1 µL of oligo(dT)12–18 (500 µg/mL), 1 µL (200 units) of SuperScript II reverse transcriptase, 1 µL (2 units) of E-coli RNase and 1 µL of 10 mmol/L deoxynucleotide triphosphate (Invitrogen) in total volume of 20 µl. All real-time PCRs (RT-PCRs) were done using an ABI 7300 Sequence Detection System. Primer and probe for the target gene and the internal control gene (GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase) were designed and ordered from ABI (Assay ID: AJBJXUX; Part Number: 4441114). A singleplex reaction mix was prepared according to the manufacturer's protocol of ‘Assays-on-Demand Gene Expression Products’, including 10 µL Taqman Universal PCR Master Mix, No AmpErase UNG (2X), 1 µL of 20X Assays on-Demand Gene Expression Assay Mix (all Gene Expression assays have a 6-carboxyfluorescein (FAM) reporter dye at the 5′ end of the TaqMan minor groove binder (MGB) probe and a non-fluorescent quencher at the 3′ end of the probe) and 9 µL of cDNA (1000 ng) diluted in RNase-free water to a total volume of 20 µL. Each sample for the gene was run in triplicate and the expression level was averaged over all runs. The thermal cycling conditions included an initial denaturation step at 95°C for 10 min, 40 cycles at 95°C for 15 s and 60°C for 1 min.

Statistical analysis

Association testing was performed using SNPTEST software (V.2.2), with adjustment for age, sex and study variables for NCI. Two eigenvectors (ev4 and ev8) were significantly associated with case status (p<0.05) in the baseline model (not including SNP effects) which was adjusted for age, sex, study and all top 10 eigenvectors, and therefore these two significant eigenvectors were also included to adjust for population stratification in final association models. For Nanjing and Beijing, age, sex, smoking and alcohol consumption were adjusted in baseline models. Three eigenvectors (ev1, ev4 and ev9) for Nanjing and five eigenvectors (ev1, ev3, ev7, ev9 and ev10) for Beijing were adjusted for population stratification separately, which were also significantly associated with case status (p<0.05). In each replication study, we adjusted for gender, age, smoking and alcohol consumption only. For the meta-analysis we used the meta-module implemented in genotype library utilities (GLU) (see URLs). Strand flipping was handled by comparing alleles either with direct matching or with reverse complement matching. For A/T or G/C SNPs, strand matching was based on allele frequency checking. The fixed-effects inverse variance method was used to combine the β estimates and SEs from each GWAS scan as well as the replication stages. The p value for heterogeneity was calculated using Cochran’s Q, which is distributed as a χ2 statistic with (n−1) degrees of freedom, where n is the number of sets included in the meta-analysis. I2 was calculated as 100%×(Q–(n–1))/Q. Data analysis and management was performed with GLU or PLINK (see URLs). PLINK was also used for the conditional haplotype analysis. Wilcoxon signed-rank test (R package) was applied to the tumour/normal paired quantitative RT-PCR data to assess the RNA expression level.

In silico bioinformatics analysis

We used GTEx (see URLs) for expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) information for associated SNPs (see online supplementary table S5). We also searched HaploReg (V.3)19 to explore potential functional annotations within Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) data for the genomic regions surrounding our lead SNPs (see online supplementary table S6).

Results

To discover additional susceptibility alleles for non-cardia gastric cancer in the Han Chinese population, we conducted a combined analysis of two previously published GWAS10 11 after imputing the genetic data with the 1000 Genome Project data Phase I release (V.3).20 The combined dataset included a total of 6 223 896 SNPs for a fixed-effects meta-analysis of 2031 cases and 4970 cancer-free controls (see online supplementary table S1). Quantile-quantile and Manhattan plots based on stage 1 meta-analysis p values are shown in online supplementary figures S1 and S2, respectively. We further followed up 37 promising loci (see Methods) and genotyped them in an independent set of 1145 cases and 2253 controls in stage 2A (see online supplementary table S2). Finally, for stage 2B, we advanced five loci that were nominally significant in stage2A to a second independent set of 2419 cases and 2384 controls (see online supplementary table S3). Based on the overall meta-analysis including two discovery GWAS scans and two replication studies, we identified two novel risk loci for non-cardia gastric cancer, the first one is rs7712641 at 5q14.3 (per-allele OR=0.84, 95% CI 0.80 to 0.88; p=1.21×10−11). No heterogeneity was observed across the two GWAS scans and two replication studies (Phet=0.56) (table 1). There are no protein-coding genes within the 1 Mb of the associated SNP (chr5: 88 346 298–89 459 630; hg19) (figure 1A). However, rs7712641 is located in the intron of lnc-POLR3G-4 (XLOC_004464), a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) which is poorly characterised. To explore the possible effect of the SNP marker on the lncRNA, lnc-POLR3G-4, we extracted total RNA from 75 matched gastric non-cardia adenocarcinoma and adjacent normal tissue pairs and performed a quantitative RT-PCR analysis to measure its expression abundance. We found that expression differed between tumour and normal tissues (Pwilcoxon signed-rank=7.2×10−4); with the majority of pairs (50 of 75) showing lower expression in tumour compared with normal tissue (figure 2). These data provided preliminary evidence that this lncRNA could function in a manner resembling a tumour suppressor gene. However, the association between rs7712641and expression of lnc-POLR3G-4 in normal tissue was negative (p=0.99), which does not support the notion of a functional role for this SNP. More functional studies are warranted to clarify the complicated phenomena.
Table 1

Four single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with non-cardia gastric cancer risk above genome-wide significance level

Cytoband (BP)NCBI dbSNP identifier, build 138 (referent, effect allele)Nearest geneGroupEffect allele frequency (case, control)OR (95% CI)p ValuePhetI2
1q22rs80142782ASH1LNCI0.06, 0.070.68 (0.55 to 0.86)7.44E-04
155485027(T,C)Beijing0.03, 0.070.47 (0.27 to 0.80)5.39E-03
Nanjing0.04, 0.080.56 (0.38 to 0.82)2.55E-03
Stage 2a0.05, 0.090.61 (0.50 to 0.73)1.46E-07
Stage 2b0.05, 0.070.64 (0.54 to 0.75)1.16E-07
Combined0.62 (0.56 to 0.69)1.71E-190.660.00
1q22rs4072037MUC1NCI0.14, 0.160.76 (0.65 to 0.87)1.31E-04
155162067(T,C)Beijing0.10, 0.140.87 (0.61 to 1.22)4.17E-01
Nanjing0.13, 0.160.84 (0.66 to 1.08)1.70E-01
Stage 2a0.13, 0.190.68 (0.59 to 0.77)9.63E-09
Stage 2b0.12, 0.160.75 (0.67 to 0.84)1.22E-06
Combined0.74 (0.69 to 0.79)6.28E-170.440.00
5q14.3rs7712641NANCI0.44, 0.460.88 (0.79 to 0.97)1.14E-02
88902964(C,T)Beijing0.41, 0.470.75 (0.60 to 0.93)9.41E-03
Nanjing0.45, 0.480.79 (0.67 to 0.94)7.54E-03
Stage 2a0.43, 0.480.81 (0.73 to 0.90)4.91E-05
Stage 2b0.42, 0.460.86 (0.79 to 0.94)4.94E-04
Combined0.84 (0.80 to 0.88)1.21E-110.560.00
8q24.3rs2294008PSCANCI0.31, 0.291.16 (1.03 to 1.31)1.18E-02
143761931(C,T)Beijing0.39, 0.341.29 (1.01 to 1.64)4.30E-02
Nanjing0.36, 0.321.22 (1.00 to 1.48)4.78E-02
Stage 2a0.29, 0.251.16 (1.04 to 1.30)9.04E-03
Stage 2b0.31, 0.261.26 (1.15 to 1.39)1.24E-06
Combined1.20 (1.15 to 1.28)5.95E-110.760.00

Bold indicates combined results using meta-analysis based method.

BP, base pair; C, cytosine; dbSNP, the Single Nucleotide Polymorphism database; NA, not available; NCI, National Cancer Institute; PSCA, prostate stem cell antigen; T, thymine.

Figure 1

Regional plots of association results (A) 5q14.3:88 400 000–89 400 000; (B) 1q22:152 940 379–153 897 376. Association results are based on a trend test in which –log10 p values (y axis, left) were plotted against the chromosomal positions based on hg19 (x axis). All p values were based on the discovery meta-analysis stage 1 data except for three index single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (rs7712641 in 1a; rs80142782 and rs4072037 in (B) which were based on all data (stages 1, 2A and 2B). The line graph shows recombination rate (y axis, right). The linkage disequilibrium (LD) (r2) is colour-coded (figure legend) based on estimates from the 1000 Genomes Mar 2012 release Asian (ASN) population. The plots were generated using LocusZoom online version (URLs).

Figure 2

Differential expression of lnc-POLR3G-4 between non-cardia gastric tumour and normal tissue based on a quantitative real-time PCR analysis. X axis is the log2 of tumour:normal fold change. All 75 pairs were sorted in increasing order of fold change and plotted along the Y axis. Two-thirds of pairs show lower expression in tumour compared with normal, while expression is higher in normal compared with tumour in one-third of pairs. Highlighted in the middle are 15 pairs with fold changes between 0.5 and 2 (or −1 to 1 in log2 scale). Based on all 75 pairs, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test was P=7.2×10−4 and the median tumour:normal fold change is 0.3.

Four single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with non-cardia gastric cancer risk above genome-wide significance level Bold indicates combined results using meta-analysis based method. BP, base pair; C, cytosine; dbSNP, the Single Nucleotide Polymorphism database; NA, not available; NCI, National Cancer Institute; PSCA, prostate stem cell antigen; T, thymine. Regional plots of association results (A) 5q14.3:88 400 000–89 400 000; (B) 1q22:152 940 379–153 897 376. Association results are based on a trend test in which –log10 p values (y axis, left) were plotted against the chromosomal positions based on hg19 (x axis). All p values were based on the discovery meta-analysis stage 1 data except for three index single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (rs7712641 in 1a; rs80142782 and rs4072037 in (B) which were based on all data (stages 1, 2A and 2B). The line graph shows recombination rate (y axis, right). The linkage disequilibrium (LD) (r2) is colour-coded (figure legend) based on estimates from the 1000 Genomes Mar 2012 release Asian (ASN) population. The plots were generated using LocusZoom online version (URLs). Differential expression of lnc-POLR3G-4 between non-cardia gastric tumour and normal tissue based on a quantitative real-time PCR analysis. X axis is the log2 of tumour:normal fold change. All 75 pairs were sorted in increasing order of fold change and plotted along the Y axis. Two-thirds of pairs show lower expression in tumour compared with normal, while expression is higher in normal compared with tumour in one-third of pairs. Highlighted in the middle are 15 pairs with fold changes between 0.5 and 2 (or −1 to 1 in log2 scale). Based on all 75 pairs, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test was P=7.2×10−4 and the median tumour:normal fold change is 0.3. As anticipated, the current study, which included samples from these previous GWAS reports,10 11 also replicated the association with rs4072037 (table 1; per-allele OR=0.74; 95% CI 0.69 to 0.79; p=6.28×10−17) at 1q22. However, we also identified a second strong signal in this region and by doing so established an independent, new genome-wide significant SNP rs80142782 (table 1 and figure 1B; per-allele OR=0.62; 95% CI 0.56 to 0.69; p=1.71×10−19). Based on the evidence at hand, it seems that rs80142782 is likely an independent primary signal (rs4072037 as a secondary signal) at this locus. This evidence includes the following: (1) both SNPs are about 323 kb apart and have moderately low (r2=0.3) pair-wise LD in 1000 Genome s Project data for Asians; (2) rs80142782 conditioned on rs4072037 remained genome-wide significant (Pconditional=3.47×10−8, see online supplementary table S5), although rs4072037 conditioned on rs80142782 did not (Pconditional=2.95×10−6, see online supplementary table S4); (3) we used the haplotype inference method implemented in the plink haplotype test ‘—chap’ option. For rs4072037 and rs80142782, there are three inferred haplotypes with frequencies greater than 1% from all four possible ones. The two models compared in the conditional haplotype likelihood ratio test are the null model: {CC} {CT, TT} and the alternative model: {CC} {CT} {TT}, where each {set} allows a unique effect. The conditional haplotype analysis demonstrated that the effect size of haplotype CT differed from that of TT among the possible haplotypes formed by these two SNPs (Plikelihood ratio=9.11×10−9) and(4) finally, it is notable that rs80142782 is Asian-specific with a MAF of 0.05 in Asians but monomorphic in both European and African populations. Thus, rs80142782 appears to be a better association signal at 1q22 in Asian populations. Further validation in additional studies with even larger sample sizes will be required to determine if these two SNPs are truly independent signals tagging two different causal variants. The previously reported SNP marker, rs4072037 at 1q22, is a synonymous SNP in MUC1 which is a member of the mucin family that collectively forms the protective mucous barrier on epithelial surfaces. Its expression was highest in stomach among all normal tissues examined by the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project (see URLs). Evidence suggests that rs4072037 is the functional variant for this locus because it alters transcriptional regulation and determines splice variants in MUC1.15 Although MUC1 is a putative candidate gene for gastric cancer risk, it is also interesting to note that GTEx data show that rs4072037 is an eQTL for several neighbouring genes (including THBS3, GBAP1, GBA and RP11-263K19.4) in other tissues (see online supplementary table S5). The rs80142782 may act on the ASH1L gene based on its close proximity. ASH1L encodes a member of the trithorax group of transcriptional activators and functions as an epigenetic regulator by histone methylation (H3K4 methyltransferase) and is frequently altered in lung cancer tumours and cell lines,21 22 oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma tumour tissue23 and colorectal cancer cell lines.24 It was also implicated in inflammatory autoimmune disease.25

Discussion

Our study identified a new risk locus at 5q14.3 marked by rs7712641 which lies in the intron of a lncRNA with little known prior functional characterisation. Other lncRNAs implicated in cancers include PCA3 and PCGEM1 in prostate tumour,26 and MALAT1 in tumours of the colorectum, liver, pancreas, lung, breast and prostate.27 28 It is remarkable that a recent comprehensive transcriptome analysis nominated a total of 7942 lineage-associated or cancer-associated lncRNA genes,29 for which further functional investigations are warranted. Overexpression or knockdown of this lncRNA may be informative in identifying target genes through analysis of differential gene expression profiles in non-cardia gastric tumour cell lines. Our analysis also revealed an apparently stronger associated SNP (rs80142782) at 1q22 than the previously identified rs4072037. Our data indicate that the association with rs80142782 is independent of rs4072037. Both the new locus at 5q14.3 marked by rs7712641 and the new independent signal at 1q22 marked by rs80142782 could contribute to epigenome regulation. Haploreg data show that both of these SNPs (or SNPs in high LD with them) locate to sites of multiple regulatory elements, including promoter histone marks, enhancer histone marks and DNAse hypersensitivity (see online supplementary table S6). Further functional validation studies are warranted to understand the contribution of these susceptibility alleles to gastric carcinogenesis. Online supplementary table S7 shows the results from our meta-analysis of two GWAS scans for previously reported variants from the literature. Notably we confirmed a prior independent GWAS report9 of an association between multiple SNPs in PSCA at 8q24.3 and risk of non-cardia gastric cancer. We also confirmed the association for rs13361707 in PRKAA1,11 but there was no additional evidence to support an association for rs9841504 in ZBTB20 with non-cardia gastric cancer in NCI data (p=0.27). Recently, Mocellin et al30 collected published data and nominated a list of 11 SNPs at eight loci with a high level of cumulative evidence for susceptibility to gastric cancer. Among these 11 SNPs, 4 (at 2q33.1, 3p24.1, 6p21.33 and 11q13.2, respectively) were identified beyond those previously established in GWAS findings, but none of these SNPs was associated (p<0.05) with gastric non-cardia cancer risk in the current meta-analysis. In summary, by combining two pre-existing GWAS scans of non-cardia gastric cancer to increase the sample size for the discovery stage and adding over 8000 individuals for further replication, we identified two novel loci. In the future, additional studies are warranted with larger sample size and/or with a design that considers heterogeneity of the gastric cancer where, for example, the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) recently reported four molecular subtypes for gastric cancer based on multi-omics profiling analyses.31 GTEx, http://www.gtexportal.org/; GTEx MUC1 expression, http://www.gtexportal.org/home/gene/MUC1 GLU, https://code.google.com/p/glu-genetics/; IMPUTE2 software (V.2.2.2), http://mathgen.stats.ox.ac.uk/impute/impute_v2.html; LocusZoom, http://csg.sph.umich.edu/locuszoom/; PLINK, http://pngu.mgh.harvard.edu/~purcell/plink/; SHAPEIT software (V.2), https://mathgen.stats.ox.ac.uk/genetics_software/shapeit/shapeit.html; SNPTEST software (V.2.2), https://mathgen.stats.ox.ac.uk/genetics_software/snptest/snptest.html UCSC liftOver tool, http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/downloads.html
  30 in total

1.  Gastric cancer and H pylori.

Authors:  S M Dawsey; S D Mark; P R Taylor; P J Limburg
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 23.059

2.  Regulation of apoptosis by a prostate-specific and prostate cancer-associated noncoding gene, PCGEM1.

Authors:  Xiaoqin Fu; Lakshmi Ravindranath; Nicholas Tran; Gyorgy Petrovics; Shiv Srivastava
Journal:  DNA Cell Biol       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 3.311

3.  Genome-wide association study of gastric adenocarcinoma in Asia: a comparison of associations between cardia and non-cardia tumours.

Authors:  Nan Hu; Zhaoming Wang; Xin Song; Lixuan Wei; Byung Sik Kim; Neal D Freedman; Jiwon Baek; Laurie Burdette; Jiang Chang; Charles Chung; Sanford M Dawsey; Ti Ding; Yu-Tang Gao; Carol Giffen; Yaling Han; Myunghee Hong; Jia Huang; Hee Sung Kim; Woon-Puay Koh; Linda M Liao; Yi Min Mao; You-Lin Qiao; Xiao-Ou Shu; Wen Tan; Chaoyu Wang; Chen Wu; Min-Jie Wu; Yong-Bing Xiang; Meredith Yeager; Jeong Hwan Yook; Jian-Min Yuan; Peng Zhang; Xue-Ke Zhao; Wei Zheng; Kyuyoung Song; Li-Dong Wang; Dongxin Lin; Stephen J Chanock; Alisa M Goldstein; Philip R Taylor; Christian C Abnet
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2015-06-30       Impact factor: 23.059

Review 4.  Gastric cancer and Helicobacter pylori: a combined analysis of 12 case control studies nested within prospective cohorts.

Authors: 
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 23.059

5.  MALAT-1: a long non-coding RNA and its important 3' end functional motif in colorectal cancer metastasis.

Authors:  Chuan Xu; Minhui Yang; Jie Tian; Xiaoyan Wang; Zuguo Li
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2011-04-15       Impact factor: 5.650

6.  A comprehensive analysis of common genetic variation in MUC1, MUC5AC, MUC6 genes and risk of stomach cancer.

Authors:  Yanbin Jia; Christina Persson; Lifang Hou; Zongli Zheng; Meredith Yeager; Jolanta Lissowska; Stephen J Chanock; Wong-Ho Chow; Weimin Ye
Journal:  Cancer Causes Control       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 2.506

7.  HaploReg: a resource for exploring chromatin states, conservation, and regulatory motif alterations within sets of genetically linked variants.

Authors:  Lucas D Ward; Manolis Kellis
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2011-11-07       Impact factor: 16.971

8.  Helicobacter pylori and oesophageal and gastric cancers in a prospective study in China.

Authors:  F Kamangar; Y-L Qiao; M J Blaser; X-D Sun; H Katki; J-H Fan; G I Perez-Perez; C C Abnet; P Zhao; S D Mark; P R Taylor; S M Dawsey
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2006-12-19       Impact factor: 7.640

9.  An integrated map of genetic variation from 1,092 human genomes.

Authors:  Goncalo R Abecasis; Adam Auton; Lisa D Brooks; Mark A DePristo; Richard M Durbin; Robert E Handsaker; Hyun Min Kang; Gabor T Marth; Gil A McVean
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-11-01       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Genome and transcriptome sequencing of lung cancers reveal diverse mutational and splicing events.

Authors:  Jinfeng Liu; William Lee; Zhaoshi Jiang; Zhongqiang Chen; Suchit Jhunjhunwala; Peter M Haverty; Florian Gnad; Yinghui Guan; Houston N Gilbert; Jeremy Stinson; Christiaan Klijn; Joseph Guillory; Deepali Bhatt; Steffan Vartanian; Kimberly Walter; Jocelyn Chan; Thomas Holcomb; Peter Dijkgraaf; Stephanie Johnson; Julie Koeman; John D Minna; Adi F Gazdar; Howard M Stern; Klaus P Hoeflich; Thomas D Wu; Jeff Settleman; Frederic J de Sauvage; Robert C Gentleman; Richard M Neve; David Stokoe; Zora Modrusan; Somasekar Seshagiri; David S Shames; Zemin Zhang
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2012-10-02       Impact factor: 9.043

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  32 in total

Review 1.  Genome-Wide Association Studies of Cancer in Diverse Populations.

Authors:  Sungshim L Park; Iona Cheng; Christopher A Haiman
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 4.254

2.  Multi-marker analysis of genomic annotation on gastric cancer GWAS data from Chinese populations.

Authors:  Fei Yu; Tian Tian; Bin Deng; Tianpei Wang; Qi Qi; Meng Zhu; Caiwang Yan; Hui Ding; Jinchen Wang; Juncheng Dai; Hongxia Ma; Yanbing Ding; Guangfu Jin
Journal:  Gastric Cancer       Date:  2018-06-01       Impact factor: 7.370

3.  Genetic variations associated with telomere length confer risk of gastric cardia adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Nasha Zhang; Yan Zheng; Jie Liu; Tiansui Lei; Yeyang Xu; Ming Yang
Journal:  Gastric Cancer       Date:  2019-03-21       Impact factor: 7.370

Review 4.  Resolving gastric cancer aetiology: an update in genetic predisposition.

Authors:  Paul C Lott; Luis G Carvajal-Carmona
Journal:  Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2018-12

5.  Genetically predicted high body mass index is associated with increased gastric cancer risk.

Authors:  Yingying Mao; Caiwang Yan; Qun Lu; Meng Zhu; Fei Yu; Cheng Wang; Juncheng Dai; Hongxia Ma; Zhibin Hu; Hongbing Shen; Guangfu Jin
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 4.246

6.  Non-del(5q) myelodysplastic syndromes-associated loci detected by SNP-array genome-wide association meta-analysis.

Authors:  Kathy L McGraw; Chia-Ho Cheng; Y Ann Chen; Hsin-An Hou; Björn Nilsson; Giulio Genovese; Thomas Cluzeau; Andrea Pellagatti; Bartlomiej P Przychodzen; Mar Mallo; Leonor Arenillas; Azim Mohamedali; Lionel Adès; David A Sallman; Eric Padron; Lubomir Sokol; Chimene Moreilhon; Sophie Raynaud; Hwei-Fang Tien; Jacqueline Boultwood; Benjamin L Ebert; Francesc Sole; Pierre Fenaux; Ghulam J Mufti; Jaroslaw P Maciejewski; Peter A Kanetsky; Alan F List
Journal:  Blood Adv       Date:  2019-11-26

Review 7.  Signaling pathways and therapeutic interventions in gastric cancer.

Authors:  Zi-Ning Lei; Qiu-Xu Teng; Qin Tian; Wei Chen; Yuhao Xie; Kaiming Wu; Qianlin Zeng; Leli Zeng; Yihang Pan; Zhe-Sheng Chen; Yulong He
Journal:  Signal Transduct Target Ther       Date:  2022-10-08

8.  Tipping the Scale Toward Gastric Disease: A Host-Pathogen Genomic Mismatch?

Authors:  Gloria Tavera; Douglas R Morgan; Scott M Williams
Journal:  Curr Genet Med Rep       Date:  2018-10-10

9.  LncPSCA in the 8q24.3 risk locus drives gastric cancer through destabilizing DDX5.

Authors:  Yan Zheng; Tianshui Lei; Guangfu Jin; Haiyang Guo; Nasha Zhang; Jie Chai; Mengyu Xie; Yeyang Xu; Tianpei Wang; Jiandong Liu; Yue Shen; Yemei Song; Bowen Wang; Jinming Yu; Ming Yang
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2021-09-02       Impact factor: 8.807

10.  Association of HMGA2 Polymorphisms with Glioma Susceptibility in Chinese Children.

Authors:  Jingying Zhou; Pan Wang; Ran Zhang; Xiaokai Huang; Hanqi Dai; Li Yuan; Jichen Ruan
Journal:  Pharmgenomics Pers Med       Date:  2021-05-25
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