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Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer

Tibetans existed in high altitude for ~25 thousand years and have evolutionary selected unique haplotypes assumed to be beneficial to hypoxic adaptation. EGLN1/PHD2 and EPAS1/HIF-2α, both crucial components of hypoxia sensing, are the two best-established loci contributing to high altitude adaptatio...

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Autores principales: Lanikova, Lucie, Scott Reading, N., Hu, Hao, Tashi, Tsewang, Burjanivova, Tatiana, Shestakova, Anna, Siwakoti, Bhola, Thakur, Binay Kumar, Pun, Chin Bahadur, Sapkota, Amir, Abdelaziz, Sarah, Feng, Bing-Jian, Huff, Chad D., Hashibe, Mia, Prchal, Josef T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5355300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28036300
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14340
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author Lanikova, Lucie
Scott Reading, N.
Hu, Hao
Tashi, Tsewang
Burjanivova, Tatiana
Shestakova, Anna
Siwakoti, Bhola
Thakur, Binay Kumar
Pun, Chin Bahadur
Sapkota, Amir
Abdelaziz, Sarah
Feng, Bing-Jian
Huff, Chad D.
Hashibe, Mia
Prchal, Josef T.
author_facet Lanikova, Lucie
Scott Reading, N.
Hu, Hao
Tashi, Tsewang
Burjanivova, Tatiana
Shestakova, Anna
Siwakoti, Bhola
Thakur, Binay Kumar
Pun, Chin Bahadur
Sapkota, Amir
Abdelaziz, Sarah
Feng, Bing-Jian
Huff, Chad D.
Hashibe, Mia
Prchal, Josef T.
author_sort Lanikova, Lucie
collection PubMed
description Tibetans existed in high altitude for ~25 thousand years and have evolutionary selected unique haplotypes assumed to be beneficial to hypoxic adaptation. EGLN1/PHD2 and EPAS1/HIF-2α, both crucial components of hypoxia sensing, are the two best-established loci contributing to high altitude adaptation. The co-adapted Tibetan-specific haplotype encoding for PHD2:p.[D4E/C127S] promotes increased HIF degradation under hypoxic conditions. The Tibetan-specific 200 kb EPAS1 haplotype introgressed from an archaic human population related to Denisovans which underwent evolutionary decay; however, the functional variant(s) responsible for high-altitude adaptation at EPAS1/HIF-2α have not yet been identified. Since HIF modulates the behavior of cancer cells, we hypothesized that these Tibetan selected genomic variants may modify cancer risk predisposition. Here, we ascertained the frequencies of EGLN1(D4E/C127S) and EGLN1(C127S) variants and ten EPAS1/HIF-2α variants in lung cancer patients and controls in Nepal, whose population consists of people with Indo-Aryan origin and Tibetan-related Mongoloid origin. We observed a significant association between the selected Tibetan EGLN1/PHD2 haplotype and lung cancer (p=0.0012 for D4E, p=0.0002 for C127S), corresponding to a two-fold increase in lung cancer risk. We also observed a two-fold or greater increased risk for two of the ten EPAS1/HIF-2α variants, although the association was not significant after correcting for multiple comparisons (p=0.12). Although these data cannot address the role of these genetic variants on lung cancer initiation or progression, we conclude that some selected Tibetan variants are strongly associated with a modified risk of lung cancer.
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spelling pubmed-53553002017-04-26 Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer Lanikova, Lucie Scott Reading, N. Hu, Hao Tashi, Tsewang Burjanivova, Tatiana Shestakova, Anna Siwakoti, Bhola Thakur, Binay Kumar Pun, Chin Bahadur Sapkota, Amir Abdelaziz, Sarah Feng, Bing-Jian Huff, Chad D. Hashibe, Mia Prchal, Josef T. Oncotarget Research Paper Tibetans existed in high altitude for ~25 thousand years and have evolutionary selected unique haplotypes assumed to be beneficial to hypoxic adaptation. EGLN1/PHD2 and EPAS1/HIF-2α, both crucial components of hypoxia sensing, are the two best-established loci contributing to high altitude adaptation. The co-adapted Tibetan-specific haplotype encoding for PHD2:p.[D4E/C127S] promotes increased HIF degradation under hypoxic conditions. The Tibetan-specific 200 kb EPAS1 haplotype introgressed from an archaic human population related to Denisovans which underwent evolutionary decay; however, the functional variant(s) responsible for high-altitude adaptation at EPAS1/HIF-2α have not yet been identified. Since HIF modulates the behavior of cancer cells, we hypothesized that these Tibetan selected genomic variants may modify cancer risk predisposition. Here, we ascertained the frequencies of EGLN1(D4E/C127S) and EGLN1(C127S) variants and ten EPAS1/HIF-2α variants in lung cancer patients and controls in Nepal, whose population consists of people with Indo-Aryan origin and Tibetan-related Mongoloid origin. We observed a significant association between the selected Tibetan EGLN1/PHD2 haplotype and lung cancer (p=0.0012 for D4E, p=0.0002 for C127S), corresponding to a two-fold increase in lung cancer risk. We also observed a two-fold or greater increased risk for two of the ten EPAS1/HIF-2α variants, although the association was not significant after correcting for multiple comparisons (p=0.12). Although these data cannot address the role of these genetic variants on lung cancer initiation or progression, we conclude that some selected Tibetan variants are strongly associated with a modified risk of lung cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2016-12-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5355300/ /pubmed/28036300 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14340 Text en Copyright: © 2017 Lanikova et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Lanikova, Lucie
Scott Reading, N.
Hu, Hao
Tashi, Tsewang
Burjanivova, Tatiana
Shestakova, Anna
Siwakoti, Bhola
Thakur, Binay Kumar
Pun, Chin Bahadur
Sapkota, Amir
Abdelaziz, Sarah
Feng, Bing-Jian
Huff, Chad D.
Hashibe, Mia
Prchal, Josef T.
Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title_full Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title_fullStr Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title_short Evolutionary selected Tibetan variants of HIF pathway and risk of lung cancer
title_sort evolutionary selected tibetan variants of hif pathway and risk of lung cancer
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5355300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28036300
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14340
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