| Literature DB >> 33927218 |
Hui-Yi Lin1, Po-Yu Huang2, Chia-Ho Cheng3, Heng-Yuan Tung4, Zhide Fang4, Anders E Berglund3, Ann Chen3, Jennifer French-Kwawu4, Darian Harris4, Julio Pow-Sang5, Kosj Yamoah6, John L Cleveland7, Shivanshu Awasthi8, Robert J Rounbehler7, Travis Gerke8, Jasreman Dhillon9, Rosalind Eeles10,11, Zsofia Kote-Jarai10, Kenneth Muir12,13, Johanna Schleutker14,15, Nora Pashayan16,17,18, David E Neal19,20, Sune F Nielsen21,22, Børge G Nordestgaard21,22, Henrik Gronberg23, Fredrik Wiklund23, Graham G Giles24,25,26, Christopher A Haiman27, Ruth C Travis28, Janet L Stanford29,30, Adam S Kibel31, Cezary Cybulski32, Kay-Tee Khaw33, Christiane Maier34, Stephen N Thibodeau35, Manuel R Teixeira36,37, Lisa Cannon-Albright38,39, Hermann Brenner40,41,42, Radka Kaneva43, Hardev Pandha44, Srilakshmi Srinivasan45,46, Judith Clements45,46, Jyotsna Batra45,46, Jong Y Park8.
Abstract
Risk classification for prostate cancer (PCa) aggressiveness and underlying mechanisms remain inadequate. Interactions between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) may provide a solution to fill these gaps. To identify SNP-SNP interactions in the four pathways (the angiogenesis-, mitochondria-, miRNA-, and androgen metabolism-related pathways) associated with PCa aggressiveness, we tested 8587 SNPs for 20,729 cases from the PCa consortium. We identified 3 KLK3 SNPs, and 1083 (P < 3.5 × 10-9) and 3145 (P < 1 × 10-5) SNP-SNP interaction pairs significantly associated with PCa aggressiveness. These SNP pairs associated with PCa aggressiveness were more significant than each of their constituent SNP individual effects. The majority (98.6%) of the 3145 pairs involved KLK3. The 3 most common gene-gene interactions were KLK3-COL4A1:COL4A2, KLK3-CDH13, and KLK3-TGFBR3. Predictions from the SNP interaction-based polygenic risk score based on 24 SNP pairs are promising. The prevalence of PCa aggressiveness was 49.8%, 21.9%, and 7.0% for the PCa cases from our cohort with the top 1%, middle 50%, and bottom 1% risk profiles. Potential biological functions of the identified KLK3 SNP-SNP interactions were supported by gene expression and protein-protein interaction results. Our findings suggest KLK3 SNP interactions may play an important role in PCa aggressiveness.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33927218 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-85169-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379