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Whole-Exome Sequencing of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Families Reveals Novel Variants Potentially Involved in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma

Authors :
Alisa M. Goldstein
Scott R. Diehl
Aurelie Vogt
K.L. Jones
Chien-Jen Chen
Guoqin Yu
Cheng-Ping Wang
Zhiwei Liu
Joseph Boland
Wan Lun Hsu
Hao Hui Chen
Sam M. Mbulaiteye
Kelly J. Yu
Meredith Yeager
Mingyi Wang
Anna E. Coghill
Pei-Jen Lou
Allan Hildesheim
Source :
Scientific Reports, Scientific Reports, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2019.

Abstract

Genetic susceptibility is likely involved in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), a cancer caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. Understanding of genetic factors involved in NPC and how they contribute to EBV-induced carcinogenesis is limited. We conducted whole-exome capture/sequencing among 251 individuals from 97 multiplex families from Taiwan (205 affected, 21 obligate carriers, and 25 unaffected) using SeqCap EZ Human Exome Library v3.0 and Illumina HiSeq. Aligned sequences were filtered to identify likely-to-be-functional deleterious variants that co-segregated with disease. Ingenuity Pathway analysis was performed. Circulating magnesium levels were measured in 13 individuals in 2 families with NIPAL1 mutations and in 197 sporadic NPC cases and 237 controls. We identified variants in 12 genes likely involved in cancer pathogenesis, viral infection or immune responses to infection. These included genes postulated to be involved in magnesium transport (NIPAL1), EBV cell entry (ITGB6), modulation of EBV infection (BCL2L12, NEDD4L), telomere biology (CLPTM1L, BRD2, HNRNPU), modulation of cAMP signaling (RAPGEF3), DNA repair (PRKDC, MLH1), and Notch signaling (NOTCH1, DLL3). Pathway based analysis demonstrated enrichment for Notch signaling genes (p-value = 0.0006). Evaluation of individuals within NIPAL1 families suggested lower serum magnesium in NPC compared to unaffected members. A significant reduction in serum magnesium levels was observed among sporadic NPC cases compared to controls (7.1% NPC/1.7% controls below normal range; OR = 4.5; 95% CI = 1.4,14) and is consistent with findings demonstrating a role for magnesium channeling in T-cell responses to EBV. We identified novel genes associated with NPC that point to new areas of inquiry to better understand genetic factors that determine the fate of viral infections and/or otherwise predisposes to NPC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c544df4dd767304d0995c0a754bc52c5