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Genetic predisposition to mosaic Y chromosome loss in blood is associated with genomic instability in other tissues and susceptibility to non-haematological cancers

Authors :
Thompson, Deborah
Genovese, Giulio
Halvardson, Jonatan
Ulirsch, Jacob
Wright, Daniel
Terao, Chikashi
Davidsson, Olafur
Day, Felix
Sulem, Patrick
Jiang, Yunxuan
Danielsson, Marcus
Davies, Hanna
Dennis, Joe
Dunlop, Malcolm
Easton, Douglas
Fisher, Victoria
Zink, Florian
Houlston, Richard
Ingelsson, Martin
Kar, Siddhartha
Kerrison, Nicola
Kristjansson, Ragnar
Li, Rong
Loveday, Chey
Mattisson, Jonas
McCarroll, Steven
Murakami, Yoshinori
Murray, Anna
Olszewski, Pawel
Rychlicka-Buniowska, Edyta
Scott, Robert
Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur
Tomlinson, Ian
Torabi Moghadam, Behrooz
Turnbull, Clare
Wareham, Nicholas
Gudbjartsson, Daniel
Kamatani, Yoichiro
Finucane, Hilary
Hoffmann, Eva
Jackson, Steve
Stefansson, Kari
Auton, Adam
Ong, Ken
Machiela, Mitchell
Loh, Po-Ru
Dumanski, Jan
Chanock, Stephen
Forsberg, Lars
Perry, John
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Mosaic loss of chromosome Y (LOY) in circulating white blood cells is the most common form of clonal mosaicism, yet our knowledge of the causes and consequences of this is limited. Using a newly developed approach, we estimate that 20% of the UK Biobank male population (N=205,011) has detectable LOY. We identify 156 autosomal genetic determinants of LOY, which we replicate in 757,114 men of European and Japanese ancestry. These loci highlight genes involved in cell-cycle regulation, cancer susceptibility, somatic drivers of tumour growth and cancer therapy targets. Genetic susceptibility to LOY is associated with non-haematological health outcomes in both men and women, supporting the hypothesis that clonal haematopoiesis is a biomarker of genome instability in other tissues. Single-cell RNA sequencing identifies dysregulated autosomal gene expression in leukocytes with LOY, providing insights into how LOY may confer cellular growth advantage. Collectively, these data highlight the utility of studying clonal mosaicism to uncover fundamental mechanisms underlying cancer and other ageing-related diseases.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f910df316eceb27c0e085343cbb8e118