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Polymorphisms in genes of melatonin biosynthesis and signaling support the light-at-night hypothesis for breast cancer

Authors :
Wichert, K
Hoppe, R
Ickstadt, K
Behrens, T
Winter, S
Herold, R
Terschueren, C
Lo, W-Y
Guenel, P
Truong, T
Bolla, MK
Wang, Q
Dennis, J
Michailidou, K
Lush, M
Andrulis, IL
Brenner, H
Chang-Claude, J
Cox, A
Cross, SS
Czene, K
Eriksson, M
Figueroa, JD
Garcia-Closas, M
Goldberg, MS
Hamann, U
He, W
Holleczek, B
Hopper, JL
Jakubowska, A
Ko, Y-D
Lubinski, J
Mulligan, AM
Obi, N
Rhenius, V
Shah, M
Shu, X-O
Simard, J
Southey, MC
Zheng, W
Dunning, AM
Pharoah, PDP
Hall, P
Easton, DF
Bruening, T
Brauch, H
Harth, V
Rabstein, S
Wichert, K
Hoppe, R
Ickstadt, K
Behrens, T
Winter, S
Herold, R
Terschueren, C
Lo, W-Y
Guenel, P
Truong, T
Bolla, MK
Wang, Q
Dennis, J
Michailidou, K
Lush, M
Andrulis, IL
Brenner, H
Chang-Claude, J
Cox, A
Cross, SS
Czene, K
Eriksson, M
Figueroa, JD
Garcia-Closas, M
Goldberg, MS
Hamann, U
He, W
Holleczek, B
Hopper, JL
Jakubowska, A
Ko, Y-D
Lubinski, J
Mulligan, AM
Obi, N
Rhenius, V
Shah, M
Shu, X-O
Simard, J
Southey, MC
Zheng, W
Dunning, AM
Pharoah, PDP
Hall, P
Easton, DF
Bruening, T
Brauch, H
Harth, V
Rabstein, S
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Light-at-night triggers the decline of pineal gland melatonin biosynthesis and secretion and is an IARC-classified probable breast-cancer risk factor. We applied a large-scale molecular epidemiology approach to shed light on the putative role of melatonin in breast cancer. We investigated associations between breast-cancer risk and polymorphisms at genes of melatonin biosynthesis/signaling using a study population of 44,405 women from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (22,992 cases, 21,413 population-based controls). Genotype data of 97 candidate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at 18 defined gene regions were investigated for breast-cancer risk effects. We calculated adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) by logistic regression for the main-effect analysis as well as stratified analyses by estrogen- and progesterone-receptor (ER, PR) status. SNP-SNP interactions were analyzed via a two-step procedure based on logic regression. The Bayesian false-discovery probability (BFDP) was used for all analyses to account for multiple testing. Noteworthy associations (BFDP < 0.8) included 10 linked SNPs in tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) (e.g. rs1386492: OR = 1.07, 95% CI 1.02-1.12), and a SNP in the mitogen-activated protein kinase 8 (MAPK8) (rs10857561: OR = 1.11, 95% CI 1.04-1.18). The SNP-SNP interaction analysis revealed noteworthy interaction terms with TPH2- and MAPK-related SNPs (e.g. rs1386483R ∧ rs1473473D ∧ rs3729931D: OR = 1.20, 95% CI 1.09-1.32). In line with the light-at-night hypothesis that links shift work with elevated breast-cancer risks our results point to SNPs in TPH2 and MAPK-genes that may impact the intricate network of circadian regulation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1456028615
Document Type :
Electronic Resource