Low-penetrance alleles predisposing to sporadic colorectal cancers: a French case-controlled genetic association study
BMC CANCER
Authors: Kuery, Sebastien; Buecher, Bruno; Robiou-du-Pont, Sebastien; Scoul, Catherine; Colman, Helene; Le Neel, Tanguy; Le Houerou, Claire; Faroux, Roger; Ollivry, Jean; Lafraise, Bernard; Chupin, Louis-Dominique; Sebille, Veronique; Bezieau, Stephane
Abstract
Background: Sporadic colorectal cancers (CRC) are multifactorial diseases resulting from the combined effects of numerous genetic, environmental and behavioral risk factors. Genetic association studies have suggested low-penetrance alleles of extremely varied genes to be involved in susceptibility to CRC in Caucasian populations. Methods: Through a large genetic association study based on 1023 patients with sporadic CRC and 1121 controls, we tested a panel of these low-penetrance alleles to find out whether they could determine "genotypic profiles" at risk for CRC among individuals of the French population. We examined 52 polymorphisms of 35 genes-drawn from inflammation, xenobiotic detoxification, one-carbon, insulin signaling, and DNA repair pathways-for their possible contribution to colorectal carcinogenesis. The risk of cancer associated with these polymorphisms was assessed by calculation of odds ratios (OR) using multivariate analyses and logistic regression. Results: Whereas all these polymorphisms had previously been found to be associated with CRC risk, especially in Caucasian populations, we were able to replicate the association for only five of them. Three SNPs were shown to increase CRC risk: PTGS1 c.639C>A (p. Gly213Gly), IL8 c.-352T>A, and MTHFR c.1286A>C (p.Ala429Glu). On the contrary, two other SNPs, PLA2G2A c.435+230C>T and PPARG c.1431C>T (p.His477His), were associated with a decrease in CRC risk. Further analyses highlighted genotypic combinations having a greater predisposing effect on CRC (OR 1.97, 95% CI 1.31-2.97, p = 0.0009) than the allelic variants that were examined separately. Conclusion: The identification of CRC-predisposing combinations, composed of alleles PTGS1 c.639A, PLA2G2A c.435+230C, PPARG c.1431C, IL8 c.-352A, and MTHFR c.1286C, highlights the importance of inflammatory processes in susceptibility to sporadic CRC, as well as a possible crosstalk between inflammation and one-carbon pathways.
Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 is not required for preimplantation ovine conceptus development in sheep
MOLECULAR REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
Authors: O'Neil, Eleanore, V; Brooks, Kelsey; Burns, Gregory W.; Ortega, Martha S.; Denicol, Anna C.; Aguiar, Luis H.; Pedroza, Gabriela H.; Benne, Joshua; Spencer, Thomas E.
Abstract
Conceptus development and elongation is required for successful pregnancy establishment in ruminants and is coincident with the production of interferon tau (IFNT) and prostaglandins (PGs). In both the conceptus trophectoderm and endometrium, PGs are primarily synthesized through a prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2) pathway and modify endometrial gene expression and thus histotroph composition in the uterine lumen to promote conceptus growth and survival. Chemical inhibition of PG production by both the endometrium and the conceptus prevented elongation in sheep. However, the contributions of conceptus-derived PGs to preimplantation conceptus development remain unclear. In this study, CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing was used to inactivate PTGS2 in ovine embryos to determine the role of PTGS2-derived PGs in conceptus development and elongation. PTGS2 edited conceptuses produced fewer PGs, but secreted similar amounts of IFNT to their Cas9 control counterparts and elongated normally. Expression of PTGS1 was lower in PTGS2 edited conceptuses, but PPARG expression and IFNT secretion were unaffected. Content of PGs in the uterine lumen was similar as was gene expression in the endometrium of ewes who received either Cas9 control or PTGS2 edited conceptuses. These results support the idea that intrinsic PTGS2-derived PGs are not required for preimplantation embryo or conceptus survival and development in sheep.