Case-control analysis identifies shared properties of rare germline variation in cancer predisposing genes.

TitleCase-control analysis identifies shared properties of rare germline variation in cancer predisposing genes.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsArtomov, M, Joseph, V, Tiao, G, Thomas, T, Schrader, K, Klein, RJ, Kiezun, A, Gupta, N, Margolin, L, Stratigos, AJ, Kim, I, Shannon, K, Ellisen, LW, Haber, D, Getz, G, Tsao, H, Lipkin, SM, Altshuler, D, Offit, K, Daly, MJ
JournalEur J Hum Genet
Volume27
Issue5
Pagination824-828
Date Published2019 May
ISSN1476-5438
Abstract

Along with traditional effects of aging and carcinogen exposure-inherited DNA variation has substantial contribution to cancer risk. Extraordinary progress made in analysis of common variation with GWAS methodology does not provide sufficient resolution to understand rare variation. To fulfill missing classification for rare germline variation we assembled dataset of whole exome sequences from>2000 patients (selected cases tested negative for candidate genes and unselected cases) with different types of cancers (breast cancer, colon cancer, and cutaneous and ocular melanomas) matched to more than 7000 non-cancer controls and analyzed germline variation in known cancer predisposing genes to identify common properties of disease-associated DNA variation and aid the future searches for new cancer susceptibility genes. Cancer predisposing genes were divided into non-overlapping classes according to the mode of inheritance of the related cancer syndrome or known tumor suppressor activity. Out of all classes only genes linked to dominant syndromes presented significant rare germline variants enrichment in cases. Separate analysis of protein-truncating and missense variation in this list of genes confirmed significant prevalence of protein-truncating variants in cases only in loss-of-function tolerant genes (pLI < 0.1), while ultra-rare missense variants were significantly overrepresented in cases only in constrained genes (pLI > 0.9). In addition to findings in genetically enriched cases, we observed significant burden of rare variation in unselected cases, suggesting substantial role of inherited variation even in relatively late cancer manifestation. Taken together, our findings provide reference for distribution and types of DNA variation underlying inherited predisposition to some common cancer types.

DOI10.1038/s41431-019-0346-0
Alternate JournalEur. J. Hum. Genet.
PubMed ID30718883
PubMed Central IDPMC6461796
Grant ListP30 CA008748 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P41 HG003057 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
U54 HG003067 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
U54 HG003067 / / U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) /