A common deletion at BAK1 reduces enhancer activity and confers risk of intracranial germ cell tumors.
Kyuto SoneharaYui KimuraYoshiko NakanoTatsuya OzawaMeiko TakahashiKen SuzukiTakashi FujiiYuko MatsushitaArata TomiyamaToshihiro KishikawaKenichi YamamotoTatsuhiko NaitoTomonari SuzukiShigeru YamaguchiTomoru MiwaHikaru SasakiMasashi KitagawaNaoyuki OheJunya FukaiHideki OgiwaraAtsufumi KawamuraSatoru MiyawakiFumihiko MatsudaNobutaka KiyokawaKoichi IchimuraRyo NishikawaYukinori OkadaKeita TerashimaPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Intracranial germ cell tumors (IGCTs) are rare brain neoplasms that mainly occur in children and adolescents with a particularly high incidence in East Asian populations. Here, we conduct a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 133 patients with IGCTs and 762 controls of Japanese ancestry. A common 4-bp deletion polymorphism in an enhancer adjacent to BAK1 is significantly associated with the disease risk (rs3831846; P = 2.4 × 10 -9 , odds ratio = 2.46 [95% CI: 1.83-3.31], minor allele frequency = 0.43). Rs3831846 is in strong linkage disequilibrium with a testicular GCTs susceptibility variant rs210138. In-vitro reporter assays reveal rs3831846 to be a functional variant attenuating the enhancer activity, suggesting its contribution to IGCTs predisposition through altering BAK1 expression. Risk alleles of testicular GCTs derived from the European GWAS show significant positive correlations in the effect sizes with the Japanese IGCTs GWAS (P = 1.3 × 10 -4 , Spearman's ρ = 0.48). These results suggest the shared genetic susceptibility of GCTs beyond ethnicity and primary sites.