Back to Search Start Over

Fine-mapping the HOXB region detects common variants tagging a rare coding allele: evidence for synthetic association in prostate cancer.

Authors :
Saunders EJ
Dadaev T
Leongamornlert DA
Jugurnauth-Little S
Tymrakiewicz M
Wiklund F
Al Olama AA
Benlloch S
Neal DE
Hamdy FC
Donovan JL
Giles GG
Severi G
Gronberg H
Aly M
Haiman CA
Schumacher F
Henderson BE
Lindstrom S
Kraft P
Hunter DJ
Gapstur S
Chanock S
Berndt SI
Albanes D
Andriole G
Schleutker J
Weischer M
Nordestgaard BG
Canzian F
Campa D
Riboli E
Key TJ
Travis RC
Ingles SA
John EM
Hayes RB
Pharoah P
Khaw KT
Stanford JL
Ostrander EA
Signorello LB
Thibodeau SN
Schaid D
Maier C
Kibel AS
Cybulski C
Cannon-Albright L
Brenner H
Park JY
Kaneva R
Batra J
Clements JA
Teixeira MR
Xu J
Mikropoulos C
Goh C
Govindasami K
Guy M
Wilkinson RA
Sawyer EJ
Morgan A
Easton DF
Muir K
Eeles RA
Kote-Jarai Z
Source :
PLoS genetics [PLoS Genet] 2014 Feb 13; Vol. 10 (2), pp. e1004129. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Feb 13 (Print Publication: 2014).
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The HOXB13 gene has been implicated in prostate cancer (PrCa) susceptibility. We performed a high resolution fine-mapping analysis to comprehensively evaluate the association between common genetic variation across the HOXB genetic locus at 17q21 and PrCa risk. This involved genotyping 700 SNPs using a custom Illumina iSelect array (iCOGS) followed by imputation of 3195 SNPs in 20,440 PrCa cases and 21,469 controls in The PRACTICAL consortium. We identified a cluster of highly correlated common variants situated within or closely upstream of HOXB13 that were significantly associated with PrCa risk, described by rs117576373 (OR 1.30, Pā€Š=ā€Š2.62×10(-14)). Additional genotyping, conditional regression and haplotype analyses indicated that the newly identified common variants tag a rare, partially correlated coding variant in the HOXB13 gene (G84E, rs138213197), which has been identified recently as a moderate penetrance PrCa susceptibility allele. The potential for GWAS associations detected through common SNPs to be driven by rare causal variants with higher relative risks has long been proposed; however, to our knowledge this is the first experimental evidence for this phenomenon of synthetic association contributing to cancer susceptibility.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1553-7404
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
PLoS genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24550738
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004129