Back to Search Start Over

Strong Association of Variants around FOXE1 and Orofacial Clefting

Authors :
Margrieta A. Alblas
Sandra Barth
Thomas Kreusch
Régine P.M. Steegers-Theunissen
Markus Martini
Bert Braumann
Anne M. Molloy
Stefanie Nowak
Borut Peterlin
B. Lippke
Peter A. Mossey
Andreas Jäger
Markus M. Nöthen
Peter Hoffmann
E. Mangold
Heiko Reutter
Mario Paredes-Zenteno
Alexander Hemprich
Kerstin U. Ludwig
Bernd Pötzsch
Anne C. Böhmer
Stefan Herms
Sergio G. Munoz-Jimenez
Augusto Rojas-Martinez
Rocio Ortiz-Lopez
Michele Rubini
Michael Knapp
Medical Oncology
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Source :
Journal of Dental Research, 93, 376-81, Journal of Dental Research, 93(4), 376-381. SAGE Publishing, Journal of Dental Research, 93, 4, pp. 376-81
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Nonsyndromic orofacial clefting (nsOFC) is a common, complex congenital disorder. The most frequent forms are nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (nsCL/P) and nonsyndromic cleft palate only (nsCPO). Although they are generally considered distinct entities, a recent study has implicated a region around the FOXE1 gene in both nsCL/P and nsCPO. To investigate this hypothesis, we analyzed the 2 most strongly associated markers (rs3758249 and rs4460498) in 2 independent samples of differing ethnicities: Central European (949 nsCL/P cases, 155 nsCPO cases, 1163 controls) and Mayan Mesoamerican (156 nsCL/P cases, 10 nsCPO cases, 338 controls). While highly significant associations for both single-nucleotide polymorphisms were obtained in nsCL/P (rs4460498: pEurope = 6.50 × 10−06, pMayan = .0151; rs3758249: pEurope = 2.41 × 10−05, pMayan = .0299), no association was found in nsCPO ( p > .05). Genotyping of rs4460498 in 472 independent European trios revealed significant associations for nsCL/P ( p = .016) and nsCPO ( p = .043). A meta-analysis of all data revealed a genomewide significant result for nsCL/P ( p = 1.31 × 10−08), which became more significant when nsCPO cases were added ( pnsOFC = 1.56 × 10−09). These results strongly support the FOXE1 locus as a risk factor for nsOFC. With the data of the initial study, there is now considerable evidence that this locus is the first conclusive risk factor shared between nsCL/P and nsCPO.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220345
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Dental Research, 93, 376-81, Journal of Dental Research, 93(4), 376-381. SAGE Publishing, Journal of Dental Research, 93, 4, pp. 376-81
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....081ca6f0e99436fb2839fdea14ac39b9