| Literature DB >> 30582786 |
John R Shaffer1,2, Jessica LeClair3,4, Jenna C Carlson1,2,5, Eleanor Feingold2,5, Carmen J Buxó6, Kaare Christensen7, Frederic W B Deleyiannis8, L Leigh Field9, Jacqueline T Hecht10, Lina Moreno11, Ieda M Orioli12,13, Carmencita Padilla14,15, Alexandre R Vieira1,2, George L Wehby16, Jeffrey C Murray17, Seth M Weinberg1,2,18, Mary L Marazita1,2,19, Elizabeth J Leslie20.
Abstract
Genome-wide scans have shown that common risk alleles for orofacial clefts (OFC) tend to be located in noncoding regulatory elements and cumulatively explain only part of the heritability of OFCs. Low-frequency variants may account for some of the "missing" heritability. Therefore, we scanned low-frequency variants located within putative craniofacial enhancers to identify novel OFC risk variants and implicate new regulatory elements in OFC pathogenesis. Analyses were performed in a multiethnic sample of 1,995 cases of cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P), 221 cases with cleft palate (CP) only, and 1,576 unaffected controls. One hundred and nineteen putative craniofacial enhancers identified from ChIP-Seq studies in craniofacial tissues or cell lines contained multiple low-frequency (0.01-1%) variants, which we genotyped in participants using a custom Illumina panel. Two complementary statistical approaches, sequence kernel association test and combined multivariate and collapsing, were used to test association of the aggregated low-frequency variants across each enhancer region with CL/P and CP. We discovered a significant association between CP and a branchial arch enhancer near FOXP1 (mm60; p-value = .0002). Additionally, we observed a suggestive association between CL/P and a forebrain enhancer near FOXE1 (hs1717; p-value = .001). These findings suggest that low-frequency variants in craniofacial enhancer regions contribute to the complex etiology of nonsyndromic OFCs.Entities:
Keywords: cleft lip; cleft palate; genetic association; orofacial cleft
Year: 2018 PMID: 30582786 PMCID: PMC6374160 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.61002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802