6 research outputs found

    Genetic predisposition to uterine leiomyoma is determined by loci for genitourinary development and genome stability

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    Uterine leiomyomas (ULs) are benign tumors that are a major burden to women's health. A genome-wide association study on 15,453 UL cases and 392,628 controls was performed, followed by replication of the genomic risk in six cohorts. Effects of the risk alleles were evaluated in view of molecular and clinical characteristics. 22 loci displayed a genome-wide significant association. The likely predisposition genes could be grouped to two biological processes. Genes involved in genome stability were represented by TERT, TERC, OBFC1 - highlighting the role of telomere maintenance - TP53 and ATM. Genes involved in genitourinary development, WNT4, WT1, SALL1, MED12, ESR1, GREB1, FOXO1, DMRT1 and uterine stem cell marker antigen CD44, formed another strong subgroup. The combined risk contributed by the 22 loci was associated with MED12 mutation-positive tumors. The findings link genes for uterine development and genetic stability to leiomyomagenesis, and in part explain the more frequent occurrence of UL in women of African origin.Peer reviewe

    Retrotransposon insertions can initiate colorectal cancer and are associated with poor survival

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    Genomic instability pathways in colorectal cancer (CRC) have been extensively studied, but the role of retrotransposition in colorectal carcinogenesis remains poorly understood. Although retrotransposons are usually repressed, they become active in several human cancers, in particular those of the gastrointestinal tract. Here we characterize retro-transposon insertions in 202 colorectal tumor whole genomes and investigate their associations with molecular and clinical characteristics. We find highly variable retrotransposon activity among tumors and identify recurrent insertions in 15 known cancer genes. In approximately 1% of the cases we identify insertions in APC, likely to be tumor-initiating events. Insertions are positively associated with the CpG island methylator phenotype and the genomic fraction of allelic imbalance. Clinically, high number of insertions is independently associated with poor disease-specific survival.Peer reviewe

    Random projection based clustering for population genomics

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    Recent data revolution in population genomics for bacteria has increased the size of aligned sequence data sets by two-to-three orders of magnitude. This trend is expected to continue in the near future, putting an emphasis on applicability of big data techniques to leverage biologically important insights. Moreover, with the increasing density of sampling, it may also be necessary to consider alignment-free sequence analysis techniques combined with clustering to yield a sufficient insight to data. This leads to ultra high-dimensional data with tens of millions of variables, which can no longer be handled by the existing population genomic methods. Using the largest bacterial sequence data sets published to date, we demonstrate that random projection based clustering provides a highly accurate and several orders of magnitude faster approach to the analysis of both alignment-based and alignment-free genome data sets, compared with the Bayesian model-based analysis that is currently considered as the state-of-the-art. Hence, clustering methods for big data harbor considerable potential for important applications in genomics and could pave way for novel analysis pipelines even in the online setting when executed in a massively parallel computing environment

    Genome-wide association study and meta-analysis in Northern European populations replicate multiple colorectal cancer risk loci

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    Genome-wide association studies have been successful in elucidating the genetic basis of colorectal cancer (CRC), but there remains unexplained variability in genetic risk. To identify new risk variants and to confirm reported associations, we conducted a genome-wide association study in 1,701 CRC cases and 14,082 cancer-free controls from the Finnish population. A total of 9,068,015 genetic variants were imputed and tested, and 30 promising variants were studied in additional 11,647 cases and 12,356 controls of European ancestry. The previously reported association between the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs992157 (2q35) and CRC was independently replicated (p=2.08 x 10(-4); OR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.06-1.23), and it was genome-wide significant in combined analysis (p=1.50 x 10(-9); OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.08-1.16). Variants at 2q35, 6p21.2, 8q23.3, 8q24.21, 10q22.3, 10q24.2, 11q13.4, 11q23.1, 14q22.2, 15q13.3, 18q21.1, 20p12.3 and 20q13.33 were associated with CRC in the Finnish population (false discovery ratePeer reviewe

    Evidence of a causal effect of genetic tendency to gain muscle mass on uterine leiomyomata

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