4.5 Article

FGFR2 variants and breast cancer risk: fine-scale mapping using African American studies and analysis of chromatin conformation

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages 1692-1703

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddp078

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK
  2. NIH-Oxford/Cambridge PhD program
  3. US National Cancer Institute [CA 54281, CA 63464]
  4. National Cancer Institute, through contracts with Emory University [N01 HD3-3168]
  5. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center [N01 HD2-3166]
  6. Karmanos Cancer Institute at Wayne State University [N01 HD3-3174]
  7. University of Pennsylvania [N01 HD3-3176]
  8. University of Southern California [N01 HD3-3175]
  9. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [Y01 HD 7022]
  10. SEER [N01-PC-67006, N01-CN-65064, N01-CN-67010, N01-CN-0532]
  11. Hutchison Whampoa Limited
  12. Cancer Research UK [11022, 10118, 19275] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Genome-wide association studies have identified FGFR2 as a breast cancer (BC) susceptibility gene in populations of European and Asian descent, but a causative variant has not yet been conclusively identified. We hypothesized that the weaker linkage disequilibrium across this associated region in populations of African ancestry might help refine the set of candidate-causal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously identified by our group. Eight candidate-causal SNPs were evaluated in 1253 African American invasive BC cases and 1245 controls. A significant association with BC risk was found with SNP rs2981578 (unadjusted per-allele odds ratio = 1.20, 95% confidence interval 1.03-1.41, P-trend = 0.02), with the odds ratio estimate similar to that reported in European and Asian subjects. To extend the fine-mapping, genotype data from the African American studies were analyzed jointly with data from European (n = 7196 cases, 7275 controls) and Asian (n = 3901 cases, 3205 controls) studies. In the combined analysis, SNP rs2981578 was the most strongly associated. Five other SNPs were too strongly correlated to be excluded at a likelihood ratio of < 1/100 relative to rs2981578. Analysis of DNase I hypersensitive sites indicated that only two of these map to highly accessible chromatin, one of which, SNP rs2981578, has previously been implicated in up-regulating FGFR2 expression. Our results demonstrate that the association of SNPs in FGFR2 with BC risk extends to women of African American ethnicity, and illustrate the utility of combining association analysis in datasets of diverse ethnic groups with functional experiments to identify disease susceptibility variants.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available