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Chromosomes 4 and 8 implicated in a genome wide SNP linkage scan of 762 prostate cancer families collected by the ICPCG.

Authors :
Lu L
Cancel-Tassin G
Valeri A
Cussenot O
Lange EM
Cooney KA
Farnham JM
Camp NJ
Cannon-Albright LA
Tammela TL
Schleutker J
Hoegel J
Herkommer K
Maier C
Vogel W
Wiklund F
Emanuelsson M
Grönberg H
Wiley KE
Isaacs SD
Walsh PC
Helfand BT
Kan D
Catalona WJ
Stanford JL
FitzGerald LM
Johanneson B
Deutsch K
McIntosh L
Ostrander EA
Thibodeau SN
McDonnell SK
Hebbring S
Schaid DJ
Whittemore AS
Oakley-Girvan I
Hsieh CL
Powell I
Bailey-Wilson JE
Cropp CD
Simpson C
Carpten JD
Seminara D
Zheng SL
Xu J
Giles GG
Severi G
Hopper JL
English DR
Foulkes WD
Maehle L
Moller P
Badzioch MD
Edwards S
Guy M
Eeles R
Easton D
Isaacs WB
Source :
The Prostate [Prostate] 2012 Mar; Vol. 72 (4), pp. 410-26. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Jul 11.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: In spite of intensive efforts, understanding of the genetic aspects of familial prostate cancer (PC) remains largely incomplete. In a previous microsatellite-based linkage scan of 1,233 PC families, we identified suggestive evidence for linkage (i.e., LOD ≥ 1.86) at 5q12, 15q11, 17q21, 22q12, and two loci on 8p, with additional regions implicated in subsets of families defined by age at diagnosis, disease aggressiveness, or number of affected members.<br />Methods: In an attempt to replicate these findings and increase linkage resolution, we used the Illumina 6000 SNP linkage panel to perform a genome-wide linkage scan of an independent set of 762 multiplex PC families, collected by 11 International Consortium for Prostate Cancer Genetics (ICPCG) groups.<br />Results: Of the regions identified previously, modest evidence of replication was observed only on the short arm of chromosome 8, where HLOD scores of 1.63 and 3.60 were observed in the complete set of families and families with young average age at diagnosis, respectively. The most significant linkage signals found in the complete set of families were observed across a broad, 37 cM interval on 4q13-25, with LOD scores ranging from 2.02 to 2.62, increasing to 4.50 in families with older average age at diagnosis. In families with multiple cases presenting with more aggressive disease, LOD scores over 3.0 were observed at 8q24 in the vicinity of previously identified common PC risk variants, as well as MYC, an important gene in PC biology.<br />Conclusions: These results will be useful in prioritizing future susceptibility gene discovery efforts in this common cancer.<br /> (Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0045
Volume :
72
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Prostate
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21748754
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pros.21443