Functional annotation of the 2q35 breast cancer risk locus implicates a structural variant in influencing activity of a long-range enhancer element

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

  • Joseph S. Baxter
  • Nichola Johnson
  • Katarzyna Tomczyk
  • Andrea Gillespie
  • Sarah Maguire
  • Rachel Brough
  • Laura Fachal
  • Kyriaki Michailidou
  • Manjeet K. Bolla
  • Qin Wang
  • Joe Dennis
  • Thomas U. Ahearn
  • Irene L. Andrulis
  • Hoda Anton-Culver
  • Natalia N. Antonenkova
  • Volker Arndt
  • Kristan J. Aronson
  • Annelie Augustinsson
  • Heiko Becher
  • Matthias W. Beckmann
  • Sabine Behrens
  • Javier Benitez
  • Marina Bermisheva
  • Natalia V. Bogdanova
  • Bojesen, Stig Egil
  • Hermann Brenner
  • Sara Y. Brucker
  • Qiuyin Cai
  • Daniele Campa
  • Federico Canzian
  • Jose E. Castelao
  • Tsun L. Chan
  • Jenny Chang-Claude
  • Stephen J. Chanock
  • Georgia Chenevix-Trench
  • Ji Yeob Choi
  • Christine L. Clarke
  • Sarah Colonna
  • Don M. Conroy
  • Fergus J. Couch
  • Angela Cox
  • Simon S. Cross
  • Kamila Czene
  • Mary B. Daly
  • Peter Devilee
  • Thilo Dörk
  • Laure Dossus
  • Miriam Dwek
  • Diana M. Eccles
  • Henrik Flyger
  • NBCS Collaborators
  • kConFab Investigators
  • ABCTB Investigators

A combination of genetic and functional approaches has identified three independent breast cancer risk loci at 2q35. A recent fine-scale mapping analysis to refine these associations resulted in 1 (signal 1), 5 (signal 2), and 42 (signal 3) credible causal variants at these loci. We used publicly available in silico DNase I and ChIP-seq data with in vitro reporter gene and CRISPR assays to annotate signals 2 and 3. We identified putative regulatory elements that enhanced cell-type-specific transcription from the IGFBP5 promoter at both signals (30- to 40-fold increased expression by the putative regulatory element at signal 2, 2- to 3-fold by the putative regulatory element at signal 3). We further identified one of the five credible causal variants at signal 2, a 1.4 kb deletion (esv3594306), as the likely causal variant; the deletion allele of this variant was associated with an average additional increase in IGFBP5 expression of 1.3-fold (MCF-7) and 2.2-fold (T-47D). We propose a model in which the deletion allele of esv3594306 juxtaposes two transcription factor binding regions (annotated by estrogen receptor alpha ChIP-seq peaks) to generate a single extended regulatory element. This regulatory element increases cell-type-specific expression of the tumor suppressor gene IGFBP5 and, thereby, reduces risk of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer (odds ratio = 0.77, 95% CI 0.74–0.81, p = 3.1 × 10−31).

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftAmerican Journal of Human Genetics
Vol/bind108
Udgave nummer7
Sider (fra-til)1190-1203
Antal sider14
ISSN0002-9297
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2021

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
M.W.B. conducts research funded by Amgen, Novartis, and Pfizer. P.A.F. conducts research funded by Amgen, Novartis, and Pfizer and received honoraria from Roche, Novartis, and Pfizer. A.W.K. received research funding to her institution from Myriad Genetics for an unrelated project (funding dates 2017-2019). U.M. has stockownership in Abcodia Ltd. All other authors declare no conflict of interest.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors

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