Author:
Schierup Mikkel H,Mailund Thomas,Li Heng,Wang Jun,Tjønneland Anne,Vogel Ulla,Bolund Lars,Nexø Bjørn A
Abstract
Abstract
Background
A small region of about 70 kb on human chromosome 19q13.3 encompasses 4 genes of which 3, ERCC1, ERCC2, and PPP1R13L (aka RAI) are related to DNA repair and cell survival, and one, CD3EAP, aka ASE1, may be related to cell proliferation. The whole region seems related to the cellular response to external damaging agents and markers in it are associated with risk of several cancers.
Methods
We downloaded the genotypes of all markers typed in the 19q13.3 region in the HapMap populations of European, Asian and African descent and inferred haplotypes. We combined the European HapMap individuals with a Danish breast cancer case-control data set and inferred the association between HapMap haplotypes and disease risk.
Results
We found that the susceptibility haplotype in our European sample had increased from 2 to 50 percent very recently in the European population, and to almost the same extent in the Asian population. The cause of this increase is unknown. The maximal proportion of overall genetic variation due to differences between groups for Europeans versus Africans and Europeans versus Asians (the Fst value) closely matched the putative location of the susceptibility variant as judged from haplotype-based association mapping.
Conclusion
The combined observation that a common haplotype causing an increased risk of cancer in Europeans and a high differentiation between human populations is highly unusual and suggests a causal relationship with a recent increase in Europeans caused either by genetic drift overruling selection against the susceptibility variant or a positive selection for the same haplotype. The data does not allow us to distinguish between these two scenarios. The analysis suggests that the region is not involved in cancer risk in Africans and that the susceptibility variants may be more finely mapped in Asian populations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics(clinical),Genetics
Reference30 articles.
1. Vogel U, Nexo BA, Tjonneland A, Wallin H, Hertel O, Raaschou-Nielsen O: ERCC1, XPD and RAI mRNA levels in lymphocytes are not associated with lung cancer risk in a prospective study of Danes. Mutation research. 2006, 593 (1–2): 88-96.
2. Laska MJ, Strandbygard D, Kjeldgaard A, Mains M, Corydon TJ, Memon AA, Sorensen BS, Vogel U, Jensen UB, Nexo BA: Expression of the RAI gene is conducive to apoptosis: studies of induction and interference. Experimental cell research. 2007, 313 (12): 2611-2621. 10.1016/j.yexcr.2007.05.006.
3. Dybdahl M, Vogel U, Frentz G, Wallin H, Nexo BA: Polymorphisms in the DNA repair gene XPD: correlations with risk and age at onset of basal cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1999, 8 (1): 77-81.
4. Nexo BA, Vogel U, Olsen A, Ketelsen T, Bukowy Z, Thomsen BL, Wallin H, Overvad K, Tjonneland A: A specific haplotype of single nucleotide polymorphisms on chromosome 19q13.2-3 encompassing the gene RAI is indicative of post-menopausal breast cancer before age 55. Carcinogenesis. 2003, 24 (5): 899-904. 10.1093/carcin/bgg043.
5. Rockenbauer E, Bendixen MH, Bukowy Z, Yin J, Jacobsen NR, Hedayati M, Vogel U, Grossman L, Bolund L, Nexo BA: Association of chromosome 19q13.2-3 haplotypes with basal cell carcinoma: tentative delineation of an involved region using data for single nucleotide polymorphisms in two cohorts. Carcinogenesis. 2002, 23 (7): 1149-1153. 10.1093/carcin/23.7.1149.
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献