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Data from Fine Mapping of Chromosome 6q23-25 Region in Familial Lung Cancer Families Reveals RGS17 as a Likely Candidate Gene

Authors :
Marshall W. Anderson
Christopher I. Amos
Joan E. Bailey-Wilson
John Minna
Daniela Seminara
Elena Kupert
Juwon Lee
Teresa Coons
Diptasri Mandal
Henry Rothschild
Colette Gaba
Adi Gazdar
Luc Girard
Ann G. Schwartz
Pamela R. Fain
Jonathan S. Wiest
Julie M. Cunningham
Yanhong Wu
Mariza de Andrade
Gloria M. Petersen
Nat Rothman
Wong-Ho Chow
Yong-Bing Xiang
Yu-Tang Gao
Jirong Long
Xiao-Ou Shu
Wei Zheng
Susan M. Pinney
Zhifu Sun
Ping Yang
Weidong Wen
Yan Liu
Dongmei Jia
Qiong Chen
Min Wang
Yian Wang
Yan Lu
Michael James
Haris Vikis
Pengyuan Liu
Daolong Wang
Ming You
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: We have previously mapped a major susceptibility locus influencing familial lung cancer risk to chromosome 6q23-25. However, the causal gene at this locus remains undetermined. In this study, we further refined this locus to identify a single candidate gene, by fine mapping using microsatellite markers and association studies using high-density single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP).Experimental Design: Six multigenerational families with five or more affected members were chosen for fine-mapping the 6q linkage region using microsatellite markers. For association mapping, we genotyped 24 6q-linked cases and 72 unrelated noncancer controls from the Genetic Epidemiology of Lung Cancer Consortium resources using the Affymetrix 500K chipset. Significant associations were validated in two independent familial lung cancer populations: 226 familial lung cases and 313 controls from the Genetic Epidemiology of Lung Cancer Consortium, and 154 familial cases and 325 controls from Mayo Clinic. Each familial case was chosen from one high-risk lung cancer family that has three or more affected members.Results: A region-wide scan across 6q23-25 found significant association between lung cancer susceptibility and three single nucleotide polymorphisms in the first intron of the RGS17 gene. This association was further confirmed in two independent familial lung cancer populations. By quantitative real-time PCR analysis of matched tumor and normal human tissues, we found that RGS17 transcript accumulation is highly and consistently increased in sporadic lung cancers. Human lung tumor cell proliferation and tumorigenesis in nude mice are inhibited upon knockdown of RGS17 levels.Conclusion:RGS17 is a major candidate for the familial lung cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome 6q23-25.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0cf8fade561dbe17f768bd6dcc80b09f