| Literature DB >> 27378695 |
Jennifer B Permuth1, Ailith Pirie2, Y Ann Chen3, Hui-Yi Lin3, Brett M Reid1, Zhihua Chen3, Alvaro Monteiro1, Joe Dennis2, Gustavo Mendoza-Fandino1, Hoda Anton-Culver4, Elisa V Bandera5, Maria Bisogna6, Louise Brinton7, Angela Brooks-Wilson8,9, Michael E Carney10, Georgia Chenevix-Trench11, Linda S Cook12, Daniel W Cramer13, Julie M Cunningham14, Cezary Cybulski15, Aimee A D'Aloisio16, Jennifer Anne Doherty17, Madalene Earp18, Robert P Edwards19,20, Brooke L Fridley21, Simon A Gayther22, Aleksandra Gentry-Maharaj23, Marc T Goodman24,25, Jacek Gronwald15, Estrid Hogdall26, Edwin S Iversen27, Anna Jakubowska15, Allan Jensen28, Beth Y Karlan29, Linda E Kelemen30, Suzanne K Kjaer28,31, Peter Kraft32, Nhu D Le33, Douglas A Levine6, Jolanta Lissowska34, Jan Lubinski15, Keitaro Matsuo35, Usha Menon23, Rosemary Modugno19,20,36, Kirsten B Moysich37, Toru Nakanishi38, Roberta B Ness39, Sara Olson40, Irene Orlow40, Celeste L Pearce22,41, Tanja Pejovic42,43, Elizabeth M Poole44,45, Susan J Ramus22, Mary Anne Rossing46,47, Dale P Sandler48, Xiao-Ou Shu49, Honglin Song50, Jack A Taylor48, Soo-Hwang Teo51,52, Kathryn L Terry13, Pamela J Thompson29, Shelley S Tworoger44,45, Penelope M Webb53, Nicolas Wentzensen54, Lynne R Wilkens55, Stacey Winham56, Yin-Ling Woo57, Anna H Wu22, Hannah Yang54, Wei Zheng58, Argyrios Ziogas59, Catherine M Phelan1, Joellen M Schildkraut60,61, Andrew Berchuck62, Ellen L Goode18, Paul D P Pharoah2,50, Thomas A Sellers1.
Abstract
Rare and low frequency variants are not well covered in most germline genotyping arrays and are understudied in relation to epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) risk. To address this gap, we used genotyping arrays targeting rarer protein-coding variation in 8,165 EOC cases and 11,619 controls from the international Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC). Pooled association analyses were conducted at the variant and gene level for 98,543 variants directly genotyped through two exome genotyping projects. Only common variants that represent or are in strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) with previously-identified signals at established loci reached traditional thresholds for exome-wide significance (P < 5.0 × 10 - 7). One of the most significant signals (Pall histologies = 1.01 × 10 - 13;Pserous = 3.54 × 10 - 14) occurred at 3q25.31 for rs62273959, a missense variant mapping to the LEKR1 gene that is in LD (r2 = 0.90) with a previously identified 'best hit' (rs7651446) mapping to an intron of TIPARP. Suggestive associations (5.0 × 10 - 5 > P≥5.0 ×10 - 7) were detected for rare and low-frequency variants at 16 novel loci. Four rare missense variants were identified (ACTBL2 rs73757391 (5q11.2), BTD rs200337373 (3p25.1), KRT13 rs150321809 (17q21.2) and MC2R rs104894658 (18p11.21)), but only MC2R rs104894668 had a large effect size (OR = 9.66). Genes most strongly associated with EOC risk included ACTBL2 (PAML = 3.23 × 10 - 5; PSKAT-o = 9.23 × 10 - 4) and KRT13 (PAML = 1.67 × 10 - 4; PSKAT-o = 1.07 × 10 - 5), reaffirming variant-level analysis. In summary, this large study identified several rare and low-frequency variants and genes that may contribute to EOC susceptibility, albeit with possible small effects. Future studies that integrate epidemiology, sequencing, and functional assays are needed to further unravel the unexplained heritability and biology of this disease.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27378695 PMCID: PMC5179948 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddw196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150