Genome wide association study of esophageal squamous cell cancer identifies shared and distinct risk variants in African and Chinese populations
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ABSTRACT: Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) has a high disease burden in sub-Saharan Africa and has a very poor prognosis. Genome-wide association studies of ESCC in predominantly East Asian populations indicate a substantial genetic contribution to its etiology, but no genome-wide studies have been done in populations of African ancestry. Here we report a genome-wide association study in 1,686 African ESCC patients and 3,217 population-matched controls to investigate its genetic etiology. A novel, genome-wide significant risk locus was identified on chromosome 9 upstream of FAM120A (rs12379660, P=4.58x10-8, odds ratio=1.28, 95% confidence interval=1.22-1.34), and a potential African-specific risk locus was identified on chromosome 2 (rs142741123, P=5.49x10-8) within MYO1B. FAM120A is a component of oxidative stress-induced survival signals, and the associated variants at the FAM120A locus co-localized with highly significant cis-eQTLs in FAM120AOS in both esophageal mucosa and esophageal muscularis tissue. A trans-ethnic meta-analysis was then performed with the African ESCC study and a Chinese ESCC study in a combined total of 3,699 ESCC cases and 5,918 controls which identified three genome-wide significant loci on chromosome 9 at FAM120A (rs12379660, Pmeta=9.36x10-10), chromosome 10 at PLCE1 (rs7099485, Pmeta=1.48x10-8) and chromosome 22 at CHEK2 (rs1033667, Pmeta=1.47x10-9). This indicates the existence of both shared and distinct genetic risk loci for ESCC in African and Asian populations. Our genome-wide association study of ESCC conducted in a population of African ancestry indicates a substantial genetic contribution to ESCC risk in Africa.
PROVIDER: EGAS00001007477 | EGA |
REPOSITORIES: EGA
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