HNF1B variants associate with promoter methylation and regulate gene networks activated in prostate and ovarian cancer

Two independent regions within HNF1B are consistently identified in prostate and ovarian cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS); their functional roles are unclear. We link prostate cancer (PC) risk SNPs rs11649743 and rs3760511 with elevated HNF1B gene expression and allele-specific epigenet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ross-Adams, H, Ball, S, Lawrenson, K, Halim, S, Russell, R, Wells, C, Strand, SH, Ørntoft, TF, Larson, M, Armasu, S, Massie, CE, Asim, M, Mortensen, MM, Borre, M, Woodfine, K, Warren, AY, Lamb, AD, Kay, J, Whitaker, H, Ramos-Montoya, A, Murrell, A, Sørensen, KD, Fridley, BL, Goode, EL, Gayther, SA, Masters, J, Neal, DE, Mills, IG
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Rapamycin Press 2016
Description
Summary:Two independent regions within HNF1B are consistently identified in prostate and ovarian cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS); their functional roles are unclear. We link prostate cancer (PC) risk SNPs rs11649743 and rs3760511 with elevated HNF1B gene expression and allele-specific epigenetic silencing, and outline a mechanism by which common risk variants could effect functional changes that increase disease risk: functional assays suggest that HNF1B is a pro-differentiation factor that suppresses epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in unmethylated, healthy tissues. This tumor-suppressor activity is lost when HNF1B is silenced by promoter methylation in the progression to PC. Epigenetic inactivation of HNF1B in ovarian cancer also associates with known risk SNPs, with a similar impact on EMT. This represents one of the first comprehensive studies into the pleiotropic role of a GWAS-associated transcription factor across distinct cancer types, and is the first to describe a conserved role for a multi-cancer genetic risk factor.