| Literature DB >> 32889700 |
Na Qin1, Yuancheng Li1, Cheng Wang1,2,3, Meng Zhu1,4, Juncheng Dai1,2,4,5, Tongtong Hong1, Demetrius Albanes6, Stephen Lam7, Adonina Tardon8, Chu Chen9, Gary Goodman10, Stig E Bojesen11, Maria Teresa Landi12, Mattias Johansson13, Angela Risch14, H-Erich Wichmann15, Heike Bickeboller16, Gadi Rennert17, Susanne Arnold18, Paul Brennan13, John K Field19, Sanjay Shete20, Loic Le Marchand21, Olle Melander22, Hans Brunnstrom22, Geoffrey Liu23, Rayjean J Hung24, Angeline Andrew25, Lambertus A Kiemeney26, Shan Zienolddiny27, Kjell Grankvist28, Mikael Johansson29, Neil Caporaso30, Penella Woll31, Philip Lazarus32, Matthew B Schabath33, Melinda C Aldrich34, Victoria L Stevens35, Guangfu Jin1,2,4,5, David C Christiani5,36, Zhibin Hu1,2,5, Christopher I Amos37, Hongxia Ma38,39,40,41, Hongbing Shen42,43,44,45.
Abstract
Although genome-wide association studies have identified more than eighty genetic variants associated with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) risk, biological mechanisms of these variants remain largely unknown. By integrating a large-scale genotype data of 15 581 lung adenocarcinoma (AD) cases, 8350 squamous cell carcinoma (SqCC) cases, and 27 355 controls, as well as multiple transcriptome and epigenomic databases, we conducted histology-specific meta-analyses and functional annotations of both reported and novel susceptibility variants. We identified 3064 credible risk variants for NSCLC, which were overrepresented in enhancer-like and promoter-like histone modification peaks as well as DNase I hypersensitive sites. Transcription factor enrichment analysis revealed that USF1 was AD-specific while CREB1 was SqCC-specific. Functional annotation and gene-based analysis implicated 894 target genes, including 274 specifics for AD and 123 for SqCC, which were overrepresented in somatic driver genes (ER = 1.95, P = 0.005). Pathway enrichment analysis and Gene-Set Enrichment Analysis revealed that AD genes were primarily involved in immune-related pathways, while SqCC genes were homologous recombination deficiency related. Our results illustrate the molecular basis of both well-studied and new susceptibility loci of NSCLC, providing not only novel insights into the genetic heterogeneity between AD and SqCC but also a set of plausible gene targets for post-GWAS functional experiments.Entities:
Keywords: function annotation; genetic heterogeneity; genome-wide association study; homologous recombination repair deficiency; immune; lung cancer
Year: 2020 PMID: 32889700 DOI: 10.1007/s11684-020-0779-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med ISSN: 2095-0217 Impact factor: 4.592