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GWAS Study

Genomic characterization of individuals presenting extreme phenotypes of high and low risk to develop tobacco-induced lung cancer.

Fusco JP, Pita G, Pajares MJ et al.

29766673 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
228 Participants
86 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

FJ
Fusco JP
PG
Pita G
PM
Pajares MJ
AM
Andueza MP
PA
Patiño-García A
DJ
de-Torres JP
GA
Gurpide A
ZJ
Zulueta J
AR
Alonso R
AN
Alvarez N
PR
Pio R
MI
Melero I
SM
Sanmamed MF
RR
Rodriguez Ruiz M
GI
Gil-Bazo I
LJ
Lopez-Picazo JM
CC
Casanova C
BD
Baz Davila R
AA
Agudo A
LM
Lozano MD
GA
Gonzalez A
SN
Sala N
AE
Ardanaz E
BJ
Benitez J
ML
Montuenga L
GA
Gonzalez-Neira A
PJ
Perez-Gracia JL
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) may modulate individual susceptibility to carcinogens. We designed a genome-wide association study to characterize individuals presenting extreme phenotypes of high and low risk to develop tobacco-induced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and we validated our results. We hypothesized that this strategy would enrich the frequencies of the alleles that contribute to the observed traits. We genotyped 2.37 million SNPs in 95 extreme phenotype individuals, that is: heavy smokers that either developed NSCLC at an early age (extreme cases); or did not present NSCLC at an advanced age (extreme controls), selected from a discovery set (n = 3631). We validated significant SNPs in 133 additional subjects with extreme phenotypes selected from databases including >39,000 individuals. Two SNPs were validated: rs12660420 (pcombined = 5.66 × 10-5 ; ORcombined = 2.80), mapping to a noncoding transcript exon of PDE10A; and rs6835978 (pcombined = 1.02 × 10-4 ; ORcombined = 2.57), an intronic variant in ATP10D. We assessed the relevance of both proteins in early-stage NSCLC. PDE10A and ATP10DmRNA expressions correlated with survival in 821 stage I-II NSCLC patients (p = 0.01 and p < 0.0001). PDE10A protein expression correlated with survival in 149 patients with stage I-II NSCLC (p = 0.002). In conclusion, we validated two variants associated with extreme phenotypes of high and low risk of developing tobacco-induced NSCLC. Our findings may allow to identify individuals presenting high and low risk to develop tobacco-induced NSCLC and to characterize molecular mechanisms of carcinogenesis and resistance to develop NSCLC.

47 European ancestry early age cases, 48 European ancestry advanced age controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

228
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
78 European ancestry early age cases, 55 European ancestry advanced age controls
Replication Participants
European
Ancestry
Spain
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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