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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2012-12-20
    Description: Much evidence show that over-expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) plays an important role in regulating carcinogenesis. Genetic variations in 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) of gene have been reported to affect gene expression by interfering with microRNAs (miRNAs), which are thought to function as either tumour suppressors or oncogenes by binding to their target mRNA. In this study, we investigated the association between the EGFR 3'UTR 774T〉C polymorphism and bladder cancer risk. We used the TaqMan technology to genotype this genetic variant in a hospital-based case–control study of 908 bladder cancer patients and 1239 controls in a Chinese population. We found that the 774CC genotype was associated with a statistically significantly increased risk of bladder cancer [adjusted odds ratio = 1.29, 95% confidence interval = 1.05–1.58], compared with the 774TT/TC genotype, and this increased risk was more pronounced among subgroups of age 〉 65 years, non-smokers and patients’ tumour invasive stage. Furthermore, luciferase assays in T24 cell showed that EGFR 3'UTR 774 T to C substitution could increase the expression of EGFR, which was consistent with the association study finding. Additionally, we also provide evidence that 774T〉C polymorphism increasing EGFR expression was not regulated by hsa-miR-214 binding. These findings suggested that EGFR 3'UTR 774T〉C polymorphism may contribute to susceptibility to bladder cancer.
    Print ISSN: 0267-8357
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3804
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 2
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Many colorectal cancers (CRCs) develop in genetically susceptible individuals most of whom are not carriers of germ line mismatch repair or APC gene mutations and much of the heritable risk of CRC appears to be attributable to the co-inheritance of multiple low-risk variants. The accumulated experience to date in identifying this class of susceptibility allele has highlighted the need to conduct statistically and methodologically rigorous studies and the need for the multi-centre collaboration. This has been the motivation for establishing the COGENT (COlorectal cancer GENeTics) consortium which now includes over 20 research groups in Europe, Australia, the Americas, China and Japan actively working on CRC genetics. Here, we review the rationale for identifying low-penetrance variants for CRC and the current and future challenges for COGENT.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common cancers worldwide with a peak of incidence in industrialised countries. It is a complex disease related to environmental and genetic risk factors. Low-penetrance genetic variations contribute significantly to sporadic and familial form of CRC. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have uncovered numerous robust associations between common variants and CRC risk; only a few of those were protein altering non-synonymous polymorphisms. One of the hypotheses is that non-coding and intergenic variants may change the expression levels of one or several target genes and, thus, account for a fraction of phenotypic differences, including susceptibility to CRC. Such genetic variations have been detected as expression quantitative loci (eQTLs) that show linkage/association to a large number of genes and have been defined as "master regulators of transcription". In the present work, we overview the potentialities to use results from GWAS and eQTL studies in the identification as well as investigation of master regulators in CRC susceptibility.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major cause of mortality throughout the world and risk of CRC is known to be modulated by nutritional factors. Low intake of the micronutrient selenium (Se) has been implicated as a risk factor in CRC, and in this article we describe the biochemical functions of selenium in selenoproteins, review the evidence for an association of selenium status with CRC and adenoma risk and describe the genetic epidemiological data on selenoprotein genes and CRC risk. Epidemiological evidence linking Se intake to CRC risk is limited but there is strong evidence for a link to adenoma risk. Two studies show an association between a genetic variant in the selenoprotein S gene and CRC risk. Selenium intake modulates selenoprotein expression in the colon, especially selenoproteins W, H, M, 15 kDa selenoprotein and glutathione peroxidase 1, and downstream targets such as endoplasmic reticulum stress response, oxidative stress and inflammatory pathways. We hypothesis that Se, through the selenoproteins, plays a key role in the ability of colonic epithelial cells to respond to microbial and oxidative challenges and that a combination of low Se intake and SNP in selenoprotein genes can impair that role and so lead to increased risk of pre-neoplastic lesions. There is a need for both further studies of selenoprotein function in the colon and major genetic epidemiological and intervention studies.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Every year, approximately 1 million new colorectal cancer (CRC) cases are diagnosed and about half a million people worldwide die due to this cancer. Known differences in CRC incidence rates are mainly attributed to differences in diet and other environmental factors represented, among others, by nutrition-related complex diseases (e.g. obesity and diabetes mellitus type II). Within the last years, it has become evident that environmental risk factors can be complemented by a genetic component when considering the risk of CRC. For example, a number of polymorphisms are known to be associated with an increased risk of obesity and obesity is a risk factor for CRC. Several studies have shown that the ‘ancestral-susceptibility model’ can be reasonably applied to nutrition-related complex diseases such as obesity. The work in hand shortly discusses whether the ancestral-susceptibility model can also be applied to CRC as a nutrition-related complex disease.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Alteration of DNA integrity is a potential cause of cancer and it is assumed that reduced DNA repair capacity and accumulation of DNA damage may represent intermediate markers in carcinogenesis. In this case-control study, DNA damage and nucleotide excision repair capacity (NER-DRC) were assessed in association with sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC). Both parameters were quantified by comet assay in blood cells of 70 untreated incident patients and 70 age-matched healthy controls. mRNA expression and polymorphisms in relevant NER genes were concurrently analyzed. The aim of this study was to characterize incident CRC patients for NER-DRC and to clarify possible relations between investigated variables. Comet assay and mRNA expression analysis showed that CRC patients differ in repair capacity as compared to controls. Patients had a lower NER-DRC and simultaneously they exhibited higher endogenous DNA damage (for both P 〈 0.001). Accumulation of DNA damage and decreasing NER-DRC behaved as independent modulating parameters strongly associated with CRC. Expression levels of 6 out of 9 studied genes differed between groups ( P ≤ 0.001), but none of them was related to DRC or to any of the studied NER polymorphisms. However, in patients only, XPC Ala499Val modulated expression levels of XPC , XPB and XPD gene, whereas XPC Lys939Gln was associated with XPA expression level in controls (for all P 〈 0.05). This study provides evidence on altered DRC and DNA damage levels in sporadic CRC and proposes the relevance of the NER pathway in this malignancy. Further, alterations in a complex multigene process like DNA repair may be better characterized by functional quantification of repair capacity than by quantification of individual genes transcripts or gene variants alone.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: APC is a key ‘gatekeeper’ gene in colorectal tumorigenesis. The high frequency of APC defects observed in colorectal cancer tissue is the result of selective growth advantage of cells with loss-of-function mutations at that locus. However, mutations may also arise due to inherent sequence instability. Defective DNA mismatch repair (MMR) and base excision repair (BER) also contribute to colorectal carcinogenesis and may compound such instability. To avoid the effect of clonal selective advantage imparted by APC mutation in cancer cells, we assessed in vitro APC mutation frequency in cell lines of lymphoid lineage to investigate the influence of defective MMR and BER. In DNA repair proficient cells, we observed substantially greater inherent sequence instability in APC gene coding sequences compared to reference sequences. Surprisingly, however, this difference was abrogated in MMR defective lines. We also found greater mutation frequency at exonic DNA sequences outwith the APC region in cells defective for either MMR or BER defects. The underlying propensity for mutation at the APC gene is intriguing, while the greater frequency of mutation in cells defective for DNA repair has relevance to understanding events leading to colorectal cancer and other malignancies.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Inherited predisposition plays a role in 10–30% of colorectal cancer (CRC) cases. Of the large families with a clearly positive family history of CRC, ~40% is not affected by known CRC syndromes. The existence of families with unexplained forms of inherited CRC—familial CRC—suggests the presence of still unknown high- or moderate-risk CRC predisposing factors. While the genomic profiles of sporadic CRCs have been studied extensively, few studies have analysed the tumour profiles of hereditary or familial CRC. Here, we review recent advances in genomic tumour profiling in familial CRC in comparison with sporadic CRC. In addition, we discuss the role of known CRC risk factors in familial CRC.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Despite their prime candidate status, polymorphisms near genes involved in DNA repair or in other functions related to genome stability have been conspicuously under-represented in the significant associations reported from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of cancer susceptibility. In this study, we assessed a set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) near 157 DNA repair genes in three colorectal cancer (CRC) GWAS. Although no individual SNP showed evidence of association, the set of SNPs as a whole was associated with colorectal cancer risk. When candidate SNPs were examined, our data did not support most of the previously reported associations with CRC susceptibility, an exception being an effect of the MLH1 promoter SNP –93G〉A (rs1800734). Rare variants in CHEK2 (I157T and possibly del1100C) also appear to be associated with CRC risk. Overall, the absence to date of disease-associated DNA repair SNPs in cancer GWAS may be explained by a combination of the following: (i) many loci with individually very small effects on risk; (ii) rare alleles of moderate effect and (iii) subgroups of CRC, such as those with microsatellite instability, associated with specific variants. It will be particularly intriguing to determine whether any GWAS across cancer types identify DNA variants that predispose to cancers of more than one site.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-04-16
    Description: Over 2000 microRNA (miRNA) sequences from different species have been submitted to the miRBase, the central online repository for miRNAs, making a total of 5071 miRNA loci, expressing 5922 distinct mature miRNA sequences. In this review, we have addressed the importance of the genetic variations in humans affecting miRNAs, their target genes and the genes involved in miRNA processing for individual risk of cancer, with particular emphasis on colorectal cancer. In fact, the number of studies suggesting that individual predisposition to cancer is modulated by genetic polymorphisms affecting the biogenesis of miRNA and the interaction between miRNAs and targets has risen steeply in the last few years. We also report the first evidence that variant alleles of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within miRNA genes and miRNA targets, previously associated with the risk of cancer, behave differently when tested in functional studies. The SNPs belonging to the miRNA world are certainly contributing to new insights in the field of the genetic predisposition to disease.
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