1. Genome-wide homozygosity signatures and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia risk.
- Author
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Hosking FJ, Papaemmanuil E, Sheridan E, Kinsey SE, Lightfoot T, Roman E, Irving JA, Allan JM, Taylor M, Tomlinson IP, Greaves M, and Houlston RS
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Chromosome Mapping, Female, Genes, Recessive, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Infant, Male, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Receptors, Erythropoietin genetics, Risk Factors, United Kingdom, White People genetics, Homozygote, Precursor B-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma genetics
- Abstract
Recent studies have reported that regions of homozygosity (ROH) in the genome are detectable in outbred populations and can be associated with an increased risk of malignancy. To examine whether homozygosity is associated with an increased risk of developing childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL), we analyzed 824 ALL cases and 2398 controls genotyped for 292 200 tagging SNPs. Across the genome, cumulative distribution of ROH was not significantly different between cases and controls. Four common ROH at 10p11.2-10q11.21, 1p31.1, 19p13.2-3, and 20q11.1-23 were, however, associated with ALL risk at P less than .01 (including 1 ROH to which the erythropoietin receptor [EPOR] gene maps, P = .005) but were nonsignificant after adjusting for multiple testing. Our findings make it unlikely that levels of measured homozygosity, caused by autozygosity, uniparental isodisomy, or hemizygosity, play a major role in defining BCP-ALL risk in predominantly outbred populations.
- Published
- 2010
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