학술논문

Candidate locus analysis of the TERT–CLPTM1L cancer risk region on chromosome 5p15 identifies multiple independent variants associated with endometrial cancer risk
Document Type
article
Author
Carvajal-Carmona, Luis GO’Mara, Tracy APainter, Jodie NLose, Felicity ADennis, JoeMichailidou, KyriakiTyrer, Jonathan PAhmed, ShahanaFerguson, KaltinHealey, Catherine SPooley, KarenBeesley, JonathanCheng, TimothyJones, AngelaHowarth, KimberleyMartin, LynnGorman, MaggieHodgson, ShirleyNational Study of Endometrial Cancer Genetics Group (NSECG)The Australian National Endometrial Cancer Study Group (ANECS)Wentzensen, NicholasFasching, Peter AHein, AlexanderBeckmann, Matthias WRenner, Stefan PDörk, ThiloHillemanns, PeterDürst, MatthiasRunnebaum, IngoLambrechts, DietherCoenegrachts, LieveSchrauwen, StefanieAmant, FredericWinterhoff, BorisDowdy, Sean CGoode, Ellen LTeoman, AttilaSalvesen, Helga BTrovik, JoneNjolstad, Tormund SWerner, Henrica MJScott, Rodney JAshton, KatieProietto, TonyOtton, GeoffreyWersäll, OfraMints, MiriamTham, EmmaRENDOCASHall, PerCzene, KamilaLiu, JianjunLi, JingmeiHopper, John LSouthey, Melissa CAustralian Ovarian Cancer Study (AOCS)Ekici, Arif BRuebner, MatthiasJohnson, NicholaPeto, JulianBurwinkel, BarbaraMarme, FrederikBrenner, HermannDieffenbach, Aida KMeindl, AlfonsBrauch, HiltrudThe GENICA NetworkLindblom, AnnikaDepreeuw, JeroenMoisse, MatthieuChang-Claude, JennyRudolph, AnjaCouch, Fergus JOlson, Janet EGiles, Graham GBruinsma, FionaCunningham, Julie MFridley, Brooke LBørresen-Dale, Anne-LiseKristensen, Vessela NCox, AngelaSwerdlow, Anthony JOrr, NicholasBolla, Manjeet KWang, QinWeber, Rachel PalmieriChen, ZhihuaShah, MitulPharoah, Paul DPDunning, Alison MTomlinson, IanEaston, Douglas FSpurdle, Amanda BThompson, Deborah J
Source
Human Genetics. 134(2)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Genetic Testing
Human Genome
Prevention
Cancer
Uterine Cancer
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Chromosomes
Human
Pair 5
Databases
Nucleic Acid
Female
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Genetic Loci
Haplotypes
Humans
Membrane Proteins
Models
Genetic
Neoplasm Proteins
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Promoter Regions
Genetic
Risk Factors
Telomerase
National Study of Endometrial Cancer Genetics Group
Australian National Endometrial Cancer Study Group
RENDOCAS
Australian Ovarian Cancer Study
GENICA Network
Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Genetics & Heredity
Reproductive medicine
Language
Abstract
Several studies have reported associations between multiple cancer types and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on chromosome 5p15, which harbours TERT and CLPTM1L, but no such association has been reported with endometrial cancer. To evaluate the role of genetic variants at the TERT-CLPTM1L region in endometrial cancer risk, we carried out comprehensive fine-mapping analyses of genotyped and imputed SNPs using a custom Illumina iSelect array which includes dense SNP coverage of this region. We examined 396 SNPs (113 genotyped, 283 imputed) in 4,401 endometrial cancer cases and 28,758 controls. Single-SNP and forward/backward logistic regression models suggested evidence for three variants independently associated with endometrial cancer risk (P = 4.9 × 10(-6) to P = 7.7 × 10(-5)). Only one falls into a haplotype previously associated with other cancer types (rs7705526, in TERT intron 1), and this SNP has been shown to alter TERT promoter activity. One of the novel associations (rs13174814) maps to a second region in the TERT promoter and the other (rs62329728) is in the promoter region of CLPTM1L; neither are correlated with previously reported cancer-associated SNPs. Using TCGA RNASeq data, we found significantly increased expression of both TERT and CLPTM1L in endometrial cancer tissue compared with normal tissue (TERT P = 1.5 × 10(-18), CLPTM1L P = 1.5 × 10(-19)). Our study thus reports a novel endometrial cancer risk locus and expands the spectrum of cancer types associated with genetic variation at 5p15, further highlighting the importance of this region for cancer susceptibility.