Gene- and pathway-level analyses of iCOGS variants highlight novel signaling pathways underlying familial breast cancer susceptibility.
Christine LonjouSéverine Eon-MarchaisThérèse TruongMarie-Gabrielle DondonMojgan KarimiYue JiaoFrancesca DamiolaLaure BarjhouxDorothée Le GalJuana BeauvalletNoura MebiroukEve CavaciutiJean ChiesaAnne FloquetSéverine Audebert-BellangerSophie GiraudThierry FrebourgJean-Marc LimacherLaurence GladieffIsabelle MortemousqueHélène DreyfusSophie Lejeune-DumoulinChristine LassetLaurence Venat BouvetYves-Jean BignonPascal PujolChristine M MaugardElisabeth LuporsiValérie BonadonaCatherine NoguèsPascaline BerthetCapucine DelnattePaul GestaAlain LortholaryLaurence FaivreBruno BuecherOlivier CaronMarion Gauthier-VillarsIsabelle CoupierSylvie MazoyerLuis-Cristobal MonrazMaria KondratovaInna KupersteinPascal GuénelEmmanuel BarillotDominique Stoppat-LyonnetNadine AndrieuFabienne LesueurPublished in: International journal of cancer (2021)
Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in over 180 loci have been associated with breast cancer (BC) through genome-wide association studies involving mostly unselected population-based case-control series. Some of them modify BC risk of women carrying a BRCA1 or BRCA2 (BRCA1/2) mutation and may also explain BC risk variability in BC-prone families with no BRCA1/2 mutation. Here, we assessed the contribution of SNPs of the iCOGS array in GENESIS consisting of BC cases with no BRCA1/2 mutation and a sister with BC, and population controls. Genotyping data were available for 1281 index cases, 731 sisters with BC, 457 unaffected sisters and 1272 controls. In addition to the standard SNP-level analysis using index cases and controls, we performed pedigree-based association tests to capture transmission information in the sibships. We also performed gene- and pathway-level analyses to maximize the power to detect associations with lower-frequency SNPs or those with modest effect sizes. While SNP-level analyses identified 18 loci, gene-level analyses identified 112 genes. Furthermore, 31 Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes and 7 Atlas of Cancer Signaling Network pathways were highlighted (false discovery rate of 5%). Using results from the "index case-control" analysis, we built pathway-derived polygenic risk scores (PRS) and assessed their performance in the population-based CECILE study and in a data set composed of GENESIS-affected sisters and CECILE controls. Although these PRS had poor predictive value in the general population, they performed better than a PRS built using our SNP-level findings, and we found that the joint effect of family history and PRS needs to be considered in risk prediction models.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- case control
- dna methylation
- copy number
- breast cancer risk
- genome wide association
- squamous cell carcinoma
- signaling pathway
- genome wide identification
- healthcare
- early onset
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- high resolution
- big data
- social media
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell proliferation
- genome wide analysis
- insulin resistance