Recessive effects in cancer predisposition exposed by genome-wide and proteome-wide association studies

2020 
The characterization of germline genetic variation affecting cancer risk, known as cancer predisposition, is fundamental to preventive and personalized medicine. Current attempts to detect cancer predisposition genomic regions are typically based on small-scale familial studies or genome-wide association studies (GWAS) over dedicated case-control cohorts. In this study, we utilized the UK Biobank as a large-scale prospective cohort to conduct a comprehensive analysis of cancer predisposition using both GWAS and proteome-wide association study (PWAS), a method that highlights genetic associations mediated by functional alterations to protein-coding genes. We discovered 137 unique genomic loci implicated with cancer risk in the white British population across nine cancer types and pan-cancer. While most of these genomic regions are supported by external evidence, our results highlight novel loci as well. We performed a comparative analysis of cancer predisposition between cancer types, finding that most of the implicated regions are cancer-type specific. We further analyzed the role of recessive genetic effects in cancer predisposition. We found that 30 of the 137 cancer regions were recovered only by a recessive model, highlighting the importance of recessive inheritance outside of familial studies. Finally, we show that many of the cancer associations exert substantial cancer risk in the studied cohort, suggesting their clinical relevance.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    60
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []