Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Sep 28;15(9):e0236209. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0236209. eCollection 2020.
The genetic risk for prostate cancer has been governed by a few rare variants with high penetrance and over 150 commonly occurring variants with lower impact on risk; however, most of these variants have been identified in studies containing exclusively European individuals. People of non-European ancestries make up less than 15% of prostate cancer GWAS subjects. Across the globe, incidence of prostate cancer varies with population due to environmental and genetic factors. The discrepancy between disease incidence and representation in genetics highlights the need for more studies of the genetic risk for prostate cancer across diverse populations. To better understand the genetic risk for prostate cancer across diverse populations, we performed PrediXcan and GWAS in a case-control study of 4,769 self-identified African American (2,463 cases and 2,306 controls), 2,199 Japanese American (1,106 cases and 1,093 controls), and 2,147 Latin American (1,081 cases and 1,066 controls) individuals from the Multiethnic Genome-wide Scan of Prostate Cancer. We used prediction models from 46 tissues in GTEx version 8 and five models from monocyte transcriptomes in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. Across the three populations, we predicted 19 gene-tissue pairs, including five unique genes, to be significantly (lfsr < 0.05) associated with prostate cancer. One of these genes, NKX3-1, replicated in a larger European study. At the SNP level, 110 SNPs met genome-wide significance in the African American study while 123 SNPs met significance in the Japanese American study. Fine mapping revealed three significant independent loci in the African American study and two significant independent loci in the Japanese American study. These identified loci confirm findings from previous GWAS of prostate cancer in diverse populations while PrediXcan-identified genes suggest potential new directions for prostate cancer research in populations across the globe.
前列腺癌的遗传风险受少数几个具有高穿透性的罕见变异和 150 多个常见的低风险变异控制;然而,这些变异中的大多数是在仅包含欧洲个体的研究中发现的。非欧洲血统的人占前列腺癌 GWAS 受试者的不到 15%。在全球范围内,由于环境和遗传因素,前列腺癌的发病率因人群而异。疾病发病率与遗传学表现之间的差异突出表明,需要在不同人群中对前列腺癌的遗传风险进行更多研究。为了更好地了解不同人群中前列腺癌的遗传风险,我们在一个包含 4769 名自我认同的非裔美国人(2463 例病例和 2306 例对照)、2199 名日裔美国人(1106 例病例和 1093 例对照)和 2147 名拉丁裔美国人(1081 例病例和 1066 例对照)的病例对照研究中进行了 PrediXcan 和 GWAS 分析,这些个体来自前列腺癌的多民族全基因组扫描。我们使用了 GTEx 版本 8 中 46 种组织的预测模型和 Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis 中单核细胞转录组的 5 种模型。在这三个群体中,我们预测了 19 个基因-组织对,包括 5 个独特的基因,与前列腺癌显著相关(lfsr<0.05)。其中一个基因 NKX3-1 在一个更大的欧洲研究中得到了复制。在 SNP 水平上,在非裔美国人研究中,有 110 个 SNP 达到全基因组显著水平,而在日裔美国人研究中,有 123 个 SNP 达到显著水平。精细映射显示,在非裔美国人研究中有三个显著的独立位点,在日裔美国人研究中有两个显著的独立位点。这些鉴定的位点证实了之前在不同人群中进行的前列腺癌 GWAS 的发现,而 PrediXcan 鉴定的基因则为全球不同人群的前列腺癌研究提供了潜在的新方向。