ERCC4 associated with breast cancer risk: a two-stage case-control study using high-throughput genotyping

TitleERCC4 associated with breast cancer risk: a two-stage case-control study using high-throughput genotyping
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsMilne, RL, Ribas, G, Gonzalez-Neira, A, Fagerholm, R, Salas, A, Gonzalez, E, Dopazo, J, Nevanlinna, H, Robledo, M, Benitez, J
JournalCancer Res
Volume66
Pagination9420-7
Keywords80 and over Breast Neoplasms/epidemiology/*genetics/pathology Case-Control Studies DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics/*physiology Female Finland/epidemiology Genes; Adult Aged Aged; Recessive Genetic Predisposition to Disease Genotype Humans Introns/genetics Linkage Disequilibrium Middle Aged Neoplasm Proteins/genetics/*physiology Neoplasm Staging *Polymorphism; Single Nucleotide Risk Spain/epidemiology
Abstract

The failure of linkage studies to identify further high-penetrance susceptibility genes for breast cancer points to a polygenic model, with more common variants having modest effects on risk, as the most likely candidate. We have carried out a two-stage case-control study in two European populations to identify low-penetrance genes for breast cancer using high-throughput genotyping. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were selected across preselected cancer-related genes, choosing tagSNPs and functional variants where possible. In stage 1, genotype frequencies for 640 SNPs in 111 genes were compared between 864 breast cancer cases and 845 controls from the Spanish population. In stage 2, candidate SNPs identified in stage 1 (nominal P < 0.01) were tested in a Finnish series of 884 cases and 1,104 controls. Of the 10 candidate SNPs in seven genes identified in stage 1, one (rs744154) on intron 1 of ERCC4, a gene belonging to the nucleotide excision repair pathway, was associated with recessive protection from breast cancer after adjustment for multiple testing in stage 2 (odds ratio, 0.57; Bonferroni-adjusted P = 0.04). After considering potential functional SNPs in the region of high linkage disequilibrium that extends across the entire gene and upstream into the promoter region, we concluded that rs744154 itself could be causal. Although intronic, it is located on the first intron, in a region that is highly conserved across species, and could therefore be functionally important. This study suggests that common intronic variation in ERCC4 is associated with protection from breast cancer.

Notes

Milne, Roger Laughlin Ribas, Gloria Gonzalez-Neira, Anna Fagerholm, Rainer Salas, Antonio Gonzalez, Emilio Dopazo, Joaquin Nevanlinna, Heli Robledo, Mercedes Benitez, Javier Comparative Study Multicenter Study Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov’t United States Cancer research Cancer Res. 2006 Oct 1;66(19):9420-7.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=17018596