4.2 Article

Systematic search for rare variants in Finnish early-onset colorectal cancer patients

Journal

CANCER GENETICS
Volume 208, Issue 1-2, Pages 35-U100

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cancergen.2014.12.004

Keywords

Genetic predisposition to disease; colorectal neoplasms; age of onset; exome sequencing

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland (Finnish Center of Excellence Program) [250345]
  2. European Research Council [268648-NGG]
  3. SYSCOL [268648-NGG]
  4. Cancer Society of Finland
  5. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  6. Finnish Medical Foundation
  7. Finnish Medical Society Duodecim
  8. University of Helsinki
  9. Cancer Foundation Finland sr [140086, 150106] Funding Source: researchfish

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The heritability of colorectal cancer (CRC) is incompletely understood, and the contribution of undiscovered rare variants may be important. In search of rare disease-causing variants, we exome sequenced 22 CRC patients who were diagnosed before the age of 40 years. Exome sequencing data from 95 familial CRC patients were available as a validation set. Cases with known CRC syndromes were excluded. All patients were from Finland, a country known for its genetically homogenous population. We searched for rare nonsynonymous variants with allele frequencies below 0.1% in 3,374 Finnish and 58,112 non-Finnish controls. In addition, homozygous and compound heterozygous variants were studied. No genes with rare loss-of-function variants were present in more than one early-onset CRC patient. Three genes (ADAMTS4, CYTL1, and SYNE1) harbored rare loss-of-function variants in both early-onset and familial CRC cases. Five genes with homozygous variants in early-onset CRC cases were found (MCTP2, ARHGAP12, ATM, DONSON, and ROS1), including one gene (MCTP2) with a homozygous splice site variant. All discovered homozygous variants were exclusive to one early-onset CRC case. Independent replication is required to associate the discovered variants with CRC. These findings, together with a lack of family history in 19 of 22 (86%) early-onset patients, suggest genetic heterogeneity in unexplained early-onset CRC patients, thus emphasizing the requirement for large sample sizes and careful study designs to elucidate the role of rare variants in CRC susceptibility. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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