학술논문

Exome sequencing identifies breast cancer susceptibility genes and defines the contribution of coding variants to breast cancer risk
Document Type
Article
Source
Nature Genetics; September 2023, Vol. 55 Issue: 9 p1435-1439, 5p
Subject
Language
ISSN
10614036; 15461718
Abstract
Linkage and candidate gene studies have identified several breast cancer susceptibility genes, but the overall contribution of coding variation to breast cancer is unclear. To evaluate the role of rare coding variants more comprehensively, we performed a meta-analysis across three large whole-exome sequencing datasets, containing 26,368 female cases and 217,673 female controls. Burden tests were performed for protein-truncating and rare missense variants in 15,616 and 18,601 genes, respectively. Associations between protein-truncating variants and breast cancer were identified for the following six genes at exome-wide significance (P<2.5 × 10−6): the five known susceptibility genes ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2and PALB2, together with MAP3K1. Associations were also observed for LZTR1, ATRIPand BARD1with P< 1 × 10−4. Associations between predicted deleterious rare missense or protein-truncating variants and breast cancer were additionally identified for CDKN2Aat exome-wide significance. The overall contribution of coding variants in genes beyond the previously known genes is estimated to be small.