PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Pleiotropic and sex-specific effects of cancer GWAS SNPs on melanoma risk in the population architecture using genomics and epidemiology (PAGE) study.

  • Jonathan M Kocarnik,
  • S Lani Park,
  • Jiali Han,
  • Logan Dumitrescu,
  • Iona Cheng,
  • Lynne R Wilkens,
  • Fredrick R Schumacher,
  • Laurence Kolonel,
  • Chris S Carlson,
  • Dana C Crawford,
  • Robert J Goodloe,
  • Holli H Dilks,
  • Paxton Baker,
  • Danielle Richardson,
  • Tara C Matise,
  • José Luis Ambite,
  • Fengju Song,
  • Abrar A Qureshi,
  • Mingfeng Zhang,
  • David Duggan,
  • Carolyn Hutter,
  • Lucia Hindorff,
  • William S Bush,
  • Charles Kooperberg,
  • Loic Le Marchand,
  • Ulrike Peters

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120491
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. e0120491

Abstract

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Several regions of the genome show pleiotropic associations with multiple cancers. We sought to evaluate whether 181 single-nucleotide polymorphisms previously associated with various cancers in genome-wide association studies were also associated with melanoma risk.We evaluated 2,131 melanoma cases and 20,353 controls from three studies in the Population Architecture using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) study (EAGLE-BioVU, MEC, WHI) and two collaborating studies (HPFS, NHS). Overall and sex-stratified analyses were performed across studies.We observed statistically significant associations with melanoma for two lung cancer SNPs in the TERT-CLPTM1L locus (Bonferroni-corrected p2.8e-4).We provide confirmatory evidence of pleiotropic associations with melanoma for two SNPs previously associated with lung cancer, and provide suggestive evidence for a male-specific association with melanoma for prostate cancer variant rs12418451. This SNP is located near TPCN2, an ion transport gene containing SNPs which have been previously associated with hair pigmentation but not melanoma risk. Previous evidence provides biological plausibility for this association, and suggests a complex interplay between ion transport, pigmentation, and melanoma risk that may vary by sex. If confirmed, these pleiotropic relationships may help elucidate shared molecular pathways between cancers and related phenotypes.