TY - JOUR
T1 - Endoplasmic stress-inducing variants in CPB1 and CPA1 and risk of pancreatic cancer
T2 - A case-control study and meta-analysis
AU - Kawamoto, Makoto
AU - Kohi, Shiro
AU - Abe, Toshiya
AU - Dbouk, Mohamad
AU - Macgregor-Das, Anne
AU - Koi, Chiho
AU - Song, Ki Byung
AU - Borges, Michael
AU - Sugimine, Ryo
AU - Laheru, Daniel
AU - Hruban, Ralph H.
AU - Roberts, Nicholas
AU - Klein, Alison P.
AU - Goggins, Michael
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank all study participants and the members of NFPTR for providing clinical data and samples and the NPFTR research team, Nancy Porter, Toyoshi Obitayo and Queenster Nartly. Michael Goggins is the Sol Goldman Professor of Pancreatic Cancer Research.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 UICC.
PY - 2022/4/1
Y1 - 2022/4/1
N2 - Gene variants that encode pancreatic enzymes with impaired secretion can induce pancreatic acinar endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, cellular injury and pancreatitis. The role of such variants in pancreatic cancer risk has received little attention. We compared the prevalence of ER stress-inducing variants in CPA1 and CPB1 in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC cases), enrolled in the National Familial Pancreas Tumor Registry, to their prevalence in noncancer controls in the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD). Variants of unknown significance were expressed and variants with reduced secretion assessed for ER stress induction. In vitro assessments were compared with software predictions of variant function. Protein variant software was used to assess variants found in only one gnomAD control (“n-of-one” variants). A meta-analysis of prior PDAC case/control studies was also performed. Of the 1385 patients with PDAC, 0.65% were found to harbor an ER stress-inducing variant in CPA1 or CPB1, compared to 0.17% of the 64 026 controls (odds ratio [OR]: 3.80 [1.92-7.51], P =.0001). ER stress-inducing variants in the CPA1 gene were identified in 4 of 1385 PDAC cases vs 77 of 64 026 gnomAD controls (OR: 2.4 [0.88-6.58], P =.087), and variants in CPB1 were detected in 5 of 1385 cases vs 33 of 64 026 controls (OR: 7.02 [2.74-18.01], P =.0001). Meta-analysis demonstrated strong associations for pancreatic cancer and ER-stress inducing variants for both CPA1 (OR: 3.65 [1.58-8.39], P <.023) and CPB1 (OR: 9.51 [3.46-26.15], P <.001). Rare variants in CPB1 and CPA1 that induce ER stress are associated with increased odds of developing pancreatic cancer.
AB - Gene variants that encode pancreatic enzymes with impaired secretion can induce pancreatic acinar endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, cellular injury and pancreatitis. The role of such variants in pancreatic cancer risk has received little attention. We compared the prevalence of ER stress-inducing variants in CPA1 and CPB1 in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC cases), enrolled in the National Familial Pancreas Tumor Registry, to their prevalence in noncancer controls in the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD). Variants of unknown significance were expressed and variants with reduced secretion assessed for ER stress induction. In vitro assessments were compared with software predictions of variant function. Protein variant software was used to assess variants found in only one gnomAD control (“n-of-one” variants). A meta-analysis of prior PDAC case/control studies was also performed. Of the 1385 patients with PDAC, 0.65% were found to harbor an ER stress-inducing variant in CPA1 or CPB1, compared to 0.17% of the 64 026 controls (odds ratio [OR]: 3.80 [1.92-7.51], P =.0001). ER stress-inducing variants in the CPA1 gene were identified in 4 of 1385 PDAC cases vs 77 of 64 026 gnomAD controls (OR: 2.4 [0.88-6.58], P =.087), and variants in CPB1 were detected in 5 of 1385 cases vs 33 of 64 026 controls (OR: 7.02 [2.74-18.01], P =.0001). Meta-analysis demonstrated strong associations for pancreatic cancer and ER-stress inducing variants for both CPA1 (OR: 3.65 [1.58-8.39], P <.023) and CPB1 (OR: 9.51 [3.46-26.15], P <.001). Rare variants in CPB1 and CPA1 that induce ER stress are associated with increased odds of developing pancreatic cancer.
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U2 - 10.1002/ijc.33883
DO - 10.1002/ijc.33883
M3 - Article
C2 - 34817877
AN - SCOPUS:85120923911
SN - 0020-7136
VL - 150
SP - 1123
EP - 1133
JO - International Journal of Cancer
JF - International Journal of Cancer
IS - 7
ER -