Genetic association with overall survival of taxane-treated lung cancer patients a genome-wide association study in human lymphoblastoid cell lines followed by a clinical association study

Nifang Niu, Daniel J. Schaid, Ryan P. Abo, Krishna Kalari, Brooke L. Fridley, Qiping Feng, Gregory Jenkins, Anthony Batzler, Abra G. Brisbin, Julie M. Cunningham, Liang Li, Zhifu Sun, Ping Yang, Liewei Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Taxane is one of the first line treatments of lung cancer. In order to identify novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that might contribute to taxane response, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for two taxanes, paclitaxel and docetaxel, using 276 lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs), followed by genotyping of top candidate SNPs in 874 lung cancer patient samples treated with paclitaxel.Methods: GWAS was performed using 1.3 million SNPs and taxane cytotoxicity IC50 values for 276 LCLs. The association of selected SNPs with overall survival in 76 small or 798 non-small cell lung cancer (SCLC, NSCLC) patients were analyzed by Cox regression model, followed by integrated SNP-microRNA-expression association analysis in LCLs and siRNA screening of candidate genes in SCLC (H196) and NSCLC (A549) cell lines.Results: 147 and 180 SNPs were associated with paclitaxel or docetaxel IC50s with p-values <10-4 in the LCLs, respectively. Genotyping of 153 candidate SNPs in 874 lung cancer patient samples identified 8 SNPs (p-value < 0.05) associated with either SCLC or NSCLC patient overall survival. Knockdown of PIP4K2A, CCT5, CMBL, EXO1, KMO and OPN3, genes within 200 kb up-/downstream of the 3 SNPs that were associated with SCLC overall survival (rs1778335, rs2662411 and rs7519667), significantly desensitized H196 to paclitaxel. SNPs rs2662411 and rs1778335 were associated with mRNA expression of CMBL or PIP4K2A through microRNA (miRNA) hsa-miR-584 or hsa-miR-1468.Conclusions: GWAS in an LCL model system, joined with clinical translational and functional studies, might help us identify genetic variations associated with overall survival of lung cancer patients treated paclitaxel.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number422
JournalBMC cancer
Volume12
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 24 2012

Keywords

  • Genome-wide association
  • Lung cancer
  • Lymphoblastoid cell line
  • Overall survival
  • Taxane

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Genetics
  • Cancer Research

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