학술논문

The contribution of rare variation to prostate cancer heritability
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Genetics. 48(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Prevention
Urologic Diseases
Cancer
Aging
Prostate Cancer
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Aged
Asian People
Black People
Case-Control Studies
Cohort Studies
Female
Gene Frequency
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Prostatic Neoplasms
Uganda
PRACTICAL consortium
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Agricultural biotechnology
Bioinformatics and computational biology
Language
Abstract
We report targeted sequencing of 63 known prostate cancer risk regions in a multi-ancestry study of 9,237 men and use the data to explore the contribution of low-frequency variation to disease risk. We show that SNPs with minor allele frequencies (MAFs) of 0.1-1% explain a substantial fraction of prostate cancer risk in men of African ancestry. We estimate that these SNPs account for 0.12 (standard error (s.e.) = 0.05) of variance in risk (∼42% of the variance contributed by SNPs with MAF of 0.1-50%). This contribution is much larger than the fraction of neutral variation due to SNPs in this class, implying that natural selection has driven down the frequency of many prostate cancer risk alleles; we estimate the coupling between selection and allelic effects at 0.48 (95% confidence interval [0.19, 0.78]) under the Eyre-Walker model. Our results indicate that rare variants make a disproportionate contribution to genetic risk for prostate cancer and suggest the possibility that rare variants may also have an outsize effect on other common traits.