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Rare Variant, Gene-Based Association Study of Hereditary Melanoma Using Whole-Exome Sequencing

Authors :
Julia Newton-Bishop
Aravind Sankar
Kristen M. Shannon
Alexander J. Stratigos
Göran Jönsson
Tarjinder Singh
Jeffrey C. Barrett
Bobby Y. Reddy
Ivana K. Kim
D. Timothy Bishop
Graham J. Mann
Raj Kumar
Martin Lauss
Benchun Miao
Ching-Ni Njauw
Evangelos S. Gragoudas
David J. Adams
Vivek Iyer
Carla Daniela Robles-Espinoza
Elizabeth A. Holland
Anne Marie Lane
Hensin Tsao
Mykyta Artomov
Mark J. Daly
Source :
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 109
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.

Abstract

Background Extraordinary progress has been made in our understanding of common variants in many diseases, including melanoma. Because the contribution of rare coding variants is not as well characterized, we performed an exome-wide, gene-based association study of familial cutaneous melanoma (CM) and ocular melanoma (OM). Methods Using 11 990 jointly processed individual DNA samples, whole-exome sequencing was performed, followed by large-scale joint variant calling using GATK (Genome Analysis ToolKit). PLINK/SEQ was used for statistical analysis of genetic variation. Four models were used to estimate the association among different types of variants. In vitro functional validation was performed using three human melanoma cell lines in 2D and 3D proliferation assays. In vivo tumor growth was assessed using xenografts of human melanoma A375 melanoma cells in nude mice (eight mice per group). All statistical tests were two-sided. Results Strong signals were detected for CDKN2A (Pmin = 6.16 × 10-8) in the CM cohort (n = 273) and BAP1 (Pmin = 3.83 × 10‐6) in the OM (n = 99) cohort. Eleven genes that exhibited borderline association (P < 10‐4) were independently validated using The Cancer Genome Atlas melanoma cohort (379 CM, 47 OM) and a matched set of 3563 European controls with CDKN2A (P = .009), BAP1 (P = .03), and EBF3 (P = 4.75 × 10‐4), a candidate risk locus, all showing evidence of replication. EBF3 was then evaluated using germline data from a set of 132 familial melanoma cases and 4769 controls of UK origin (joint P = 1.37 × 10‐5). Somatically, loss of EBF3 expression correlated with progression, poorer outcome, and high MITF tumors. Functionally, induction of EBF3 in melanoma cells reduced cell growth in vitro, retarded tumor formation in vivo, and reduced MITF levels. Conclusions The results of this large rare variant germline association study further define the mutational landscape of hereditary melanoma and implicate EBF3 as a possible CM predisposition gene.

Details

ISSN :
14602105 and 00278874
Volume :
109
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....108f555e0862261881a319f1af23d3de
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djx083