A polymorphic enhancer near GREM1 influences bowel cancer risk through differential CDX2 and TCF7L2 binding

A rare germline duplication upstream of the bone morphogenetic protein antagonist GREM1 causes aMendelian-dominant predisposition to colorectal cancer (CRC). The underlying disease mechanism is strong, ectopic GREM1 overexpression in the intestinal epithelium. Here, we confirm that a common GREM1 po...

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Hlavní autoři: Lewis, A, Freeman-Mills, L, delaCalle-Mustienes, E, Giráldez-Pérez, R, Davis, H, Jaeger, E, Becker, M, Hubner, N, Nguyen, L, Zeron-Medina, J, Bond, G, Stunnenberg, H, Carvajal, J, Gomez-Skarmeta, J, Leedham, S, Tomlinson, I
Médium: Journal article
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: Elsevier 2014
Popis
Shrnutí:A rare germline duplication upstream of the bone morphogenetic protein antagonist GREM1 causes aMendelian-dominant predisposition to colorectal cancer (CRC). The underlying disease mechanism is strong, ectopic GREM1 overexpression in the intestinal epithelium. Here, we confirm that a common GREM1 polymorphism, rs16969681, is also associated with CRC susceptibility, conferring ~20% differential risk in the general population. We hypothesized the underlying cause to be moderate differences inGREM1 expression. We showed that rs16969681 lies in a region of active chromatin with allele- and tissue-specific enhancer activity. The CRC high-risk allele was associated with stronger gene expression, and higher Grem1 mRNA levels increased the intestinal tumor burden in ApcMin mice. The intestine-specific transcription factor CDX2 and Wnt effector TCF7L2 bound near rs16969681, with significantly higher affinity for the risk allele, and CDX2 overexpression in CDX2/GREM1-negative cells caused re-expression of GREM1. rs16969681 influences CRC risk through effects on Wnt-driven GREM1 expression in colorectal tumors. © 2014 The Authors.