A Customized Pigmentation SNP Array Identifies a Novel SNP Associated with Melanoma Predisposition in the SLC45A2 Gene
View/ Open
Date
2011-04-29Author
Ibarrola Villava, Maider
Fernandez, Lara P.
Peña Chilet, María
Pita, Guillermo
Avilés, José A.
Mayor, Matias
Gómez Fernández, Cristina
Casado, Beatriz
Martín González, Manuel
Arroyo Berdugo, Yoana
Boldo, Enrique
Lozoya, Rafael
Torrijos Aguilar, Arantxa
Pitarch, Ana
Pitarch, Gerard
Sánchez Motilla, José M.
Valcuende Cavero, Francisca
Tomás Cabedo, Gloria
Pérez Pastor, Gemma
Díaz Pérez, José Luis
Gardeazabal García, Jesús
Martínez de Lizarduy, Iñigo
Sánchez Díez, Ana
Valdés, Carlos
Pizarro, Angel
Casado, Mariano
Carretero, Gregorio
Botella Estrada, Rafael
Nagore, Eduardo
Lázaro, Pablo
Lluch, Ana
Benítez, Javier
Martínez Cadenas, Conrado
Ribas, Gloria
Metadata
Show full item record
PLoS ONE 6(4) : (2011) // e19271
Abstract
As the incidence of Malignant Melanoma (MM) reflects an interaction between skin colour and UV exposure, variations in genes implicated in pigmentation and tanning response to UV may be associated with susceptibility to MM. In this study, 363 SNPs in 65 gene regions belonging to the pigmentation pathway have been successfully genotyped using a SNP array. Five hundred and ninety MM cases and 507 controls were analyzed in a discovery phase I. Ten candidate SNPs based on a p-value threshold of 0.01 were identified. Two of them, rs35414 (SLC45A2) and rs2069398 (SILV/CKD2), were statistically significant after conservative Bonferroni correction. The best six SNPs were further tested in an independent Spanish series (624 MM cases and 789 controls). A novel SNP located on the SLC45A2 gene (rs35414) was found to be significantly associated with melanoma in both phase I and phase II (P < 0.0001). None of the other five SNPs were replicated in this second phase of the study. However, three SNPs in TYR, SILV/CDK2 and ADAMTS20 genes (rs17793678, rs2069398 and rs1510521 respectively) had an overall p-value < 0.05 when considering the whole DNA collection (1214 MM cases and 1296 controls). Both the SLC45A2 and the SILV/CDK2 variants behave as protective alleles, while the TYR and ADAMTS20 variants seem to function as risk alleles. Cumulative effects were detected when these four variants were considered together. Furthermore, individuals carrying two or more mutations in MC1R, a well-known low penetrance melanoma-predisposing gene, had a decreased MM risk if concurrently bearing the SLC45A2 protective variant. To our knowledge, this is the largest study on Spanish sporadic MM cases to date.