Polymorphic variants involved in methylation regulation: a strategy to discover risk loci for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
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Published:2023-05-02
Issue:10
Volume:60
Page:980-986
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ISSN:0022-2593
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Container-title:Journal of Medical Genetics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Med Genet
Author:
Corradi ChiaraORCID, Lencioni Giulia, Gentiluomo ManuelORCID, Felici Alessio, Latiano Anna, Kiudelis Gediminas, van Eijck Casper H J, Marta Katalin, Lawlor Rita T, Tavano Francesca, Boggi Ugo, Dijk Frederike, Cavestro Giulia Martina, Vermeulen Roel C H, Hackert Thilo, Petrone Maria Chiara, Uzunoğlu Faik Güntac, Archibugi Livia, Izbicki Jakob R, Morelli Luca, Zerbi Alessandro, Landi Stefano, Stocker Hannah, Talar-Wojnarowska Renata, Di Franco Gregorio, Hegyi Péter, Sperti Cosimo, Carrara Silvia, Capurso Gabriele, Gazouli MariaORCID, Brenner Hermann, Bunduc Stefania, Busch Olivier, Perri Francesco, Oliverius Martin, Hegyi Péter Jeno, Goetz Mara, Scognamiglio Pasquale, Mambrini Andrea, Arcidiacono Paolo Giorgio, Kreivenaite Edita, Kupcinskas Juozas, Hussein Tamas, Ermini Stefano, Milanetto Anna Caterina, Vodicka Pavel, Kiudelis Vytautas, Hlaváč Viktor, Soucek Pavel, Theodoropoulos George E, Basso Daniela, Neoptolemos John P, Nóbrega Aoki Mateus, Pezzilli Raffaele, Pasquali Claudio, Chammas Roger, Testoni Sabrina Gloria Giulia, Mohelnikova-Duchonova Beatrice, Lucchesi Maurizio, Rizzato Cosmeri, Canzian Federico, Campa DanieleORCID
Abstract
IntroductionOnly a small number of risk factors for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has been established. Several studies identified a role of epigenetics and of deregulation of DNA methylation. DNA methylation is variable across a lifetime and in different tissues; nevertheless, its levels can be regulated by genetic variants like methylation quantitative trait loci (mQTLs), which can be used as a surrogate.Materials and methodsWe scanned the whole genome for mQTLs and performed an association study in 14 705 PDAC cases and 246 921 controls. The methylation data were obtained from whole blood and pancreatic cancer tissue through online databases. We used the Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium and the Pancreatic Cancer Case–Control Consortium genome-wide association study (GWAS) data as discovery phase and the Pancreatic Disease Research consortium, the FinnGen project and the Japan Pancreatic Cancer Research consortium GWAS as replication phase.ResultsThe C allele of 15q26.1-rs12905855 showed an association with a decreased risk of PDAC (OR=0.90, 95% CI 0.87 to 0.94, p=4.93×10−8in the overall meta-analysis), reaching genome-level statistical significance. 15q26.1-rs12905855 decreases the methylation of a 'C-phosphate-G' (CpG) site located in the promoter region of theRCCD1antisense (RCCD1-AS1) gene which, when expressed, decreases the expression of the RCC1 domain-containing (RCCD1) gene (part of a histone demethylase complex). Thus, it is possible that the rs12905855 C-allele has a protective role in PDAC development through an increase ofRCCD1gene expression, made possible by the inactivity ofRCCD1-AS1.ConclusionWe identified a novel PDAC risk locus which modulates cancer risk by controlling gene expression through DNA methylation.
Funder
Fondazione Arpa Fondazione Tizzi German Cancer Research Center Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro Italian Ministry of Health
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
7 articles.
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