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Identification of four novel associations for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia risk.

Jayaram VijayakrishnanMaoxiang QianJames B StuddWenjian YangBen KinnersleyPhilip J LawPeter BroderickElizabeth A RaetzJames AllanChing-Hong PuiAjay VoraWilliams E EvansAnthony MoormanAllen YeohWentao YangChunliang LiClaus R BartramCharles G MullighanMartin ZimmermanStephen P HungerMartin SchrappeMary V RellingMartin StanullaMignon L LohRichard S HoulstonJun J Yang
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
There is increasing evidence for a strong inherited genetic basis of susceptibility to acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) in children. To identify new risk variants for B-cell ALL (B-ALL) we conducted a meta-analysis with four GWAS (genome-wide association studies), totalling 5321 cases and 16,666 controls of European descent. We herein describe novel risk loci for B-ALL at 9q21.31 (rs76925697, P = 2.11 × 10-8), for high-hyperdiploid ALL at 5q31.1 (rs886285, P = 1.56 × 10-8) and 6p21.31 (rs210143 in BAK1, P = 2.21 × 10-8), and ETV6-RUNX1 ALL at 17q21.32 (rs10853104 in IGF2BP1, P = 1.82 × 10-8). Particularly notable are the pleiotropic effects of the BAK1 variant on multiple haematological malignancies and specific effects of IGF2BP1 on ETV6-RUNX1 ALL evidenced by both germline and somatic genomic analyses. Integration of GWAS signals with transcriptomic/epigenomic profiling and 3D chromatin interaction data for these leukaemia risk loci suggests deregulation of B-cell development and the cell cycle as central mechanisms governing genetic susceptibility to ALL.
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