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Functional evaluation of genetic variants associated with endometriosis near GREB1.

Authors :
Fung, Jenny N.
Holdsworth-Carson, Sarah J.
Sapkota, Yadav
Zhen Zhen Zhao
Jones, Lincoln
Girling, Jane E.
Paiva, Premila
Healey, Martin
Nyholt, Dale R.
Rogers, Peter A. W.
Montgomery, Grant W.
Source :
Human Reproduction. May2015, Vol. 30 Issue 5, p1263-1275. 13p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

STUDY QUESTIONS: DO DNA variants in the growth regulation by estrogen in breast cancer 1 (GREB1) region regulate endometrial GREB1 expression and increase the risk of developing endometriosis in women? SUMMARY ANSWER: We identified new single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with strong association with endometriosis at the GREB 1 locus although we did not detect altered GREB 1 expression in endometriosis patients with defined genotypes. WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN: Genome-wide association studies have identified the GREB 1 region on chromosome 2p25.1 for increasing endometriosis risk. The differential expression of GREB 1 has also been reported by others in association with endometriosis disease phenotype. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Fine mapping studies comprehensively evaluated SNPs within the GREB 1 region in a large-scale data set (.2500 cases and .4000 controls). Publicly available bioinformatics tools were employed to functionally annotate SNPs showing the strongest association signal with endometriosis risk. Endometrial GREB1 mRNA and protein expression was studied with respect to phases of the menstrual cycle (n = 2-45 per cycle stage) and expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis for significant SNPs were undertaken for GREB1 [mRNA (n = 94) and protein (n = 44) in endometrium]. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Participants in this study are females who provided blood and/or endometrial tissue samples in a hospital setting. The key SNPs were genotyped using Sequenom MASS ARRAY. The functional roles and regulatory annotations for identified SNPs are predicted by various publicly available bioinformatics tools. Endometrial GREB1 expression work employed qRT-PCR, western blotting and immunohistochemistry studies. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: Fine mapping results identified a number of SNPs showing stronger association (0.004, P, 0.032) with endometriosis risk than the original GWASSNP (rs 13394619) (P = 0.034). Some of these SNPs were predicted to have functional roles, for example, interaction with transcription factor motifs. The haplotype (a combination of alleles) formed by the risk alleles from two common SNPs showed significant association (P = 0.026) with endometriosis and epistasis analysis showed no evidence for interaction between the two SNPs, suggesting an additive effect of SNPs on endometriosis risk. In normal human endometrium, GREB1 protein expression was altered depending on the cycle stage (significantly different in late proliferative versus late secretory, P, 0.05) and cell type (glandular epithelium, not stromal cells). However, GREB 1 expression in endometriosis cases versus controls and eQTL analyses did not reveal any significant changes. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: In silico prediction tools are generally based on cell lines different to our tissue and disease of interest. Functional annotations drawn from these analyses should be considered with this limitation in mind. We identified cell-specific and hormone-specific changes in GREB 1 protein expression. The lack of a significant difference observed following our GREB 1 expression studies may be the result of moderate power on mixed cell populations in the endometrial tissue samples. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: This study further implicates the GREB1 region on chromosome 2p25.1 and the GREB1 gene with involvement in endometriosis risk. More detailed functional studies are required to determine the role of the novel GREB 1 transcripts in endometriosis pathophysiology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02681161
Volume :
30
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Reproduction
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
102821791
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/dev051