A genome wide association study to identify germline copy number variants associated with cancer cachexia: a preliminary analysis

Author:

Narasimhan Ashok1,Kumaran Mahalakshmi1,Gioulbasanis Ioannis2,Skipworth Richard J.E.3,Bathe Oliver F.4,Kaasa Stein5,Strasser Florian6,Gagnon Bruno7,Baracos Vickie8,Damaraju Sambasivarao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

2. Department of Oncology Animus Kyanous Stavros General Clinic Larissa Greece

3. Department of Clinical Surgery University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

4. Department of Oncology and Arnie Charbonneau Cancer Institute University of Calgary Calgary Canada

5. European Palliative Care Research Centre (PRC), Department of Oncology, Oslo University Hospital, and Institute of Clinical Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

6. Cancer Fatigue Clinic, Onkologie Schaffhausen Cantonal Hospital St. Gallen St. Gallen Switzerland

7. Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine, Cancer Research Centre Laval University Quebec Canada

8. Department of Oncology, Division of Palliative Care Medicine University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCancer cachexia is characterized by severe loss of muscle and fat involving a complex interplay of host–tumour interactions. While much emphasis has been placed on understanding the molecular mechanisms associated with cachexia, understanding the heritable component of cachexia remains less explored. The current study aims to identify copy number variants (CNV) as genetic susceptibility determinants for weight loss in patients with cancer cachexia using genome wide association study (GWAS) approach.MethodsA total of 174 age‐matched patients with oesophagogastric or lung cancer were classified as weight losing (>10% weight loss) or weight stable participants (<2% weight loss). DNA was genotyped using Affymetrix SNP 6.0 arrays to profile CNVs. We tested CNVs with >5% frequency in the population for association with weight loss. Pathway analysis was performed using the genes embedded within CNVs. To understand if the CNVs in the present study are also expressed in skeletal muscle of patients with cachexia, we utilized two publicly available human gene expression datasets to infer the relevance of identified genes in the context of cachexia.ResultsAmong the associated CNVs, 5414 CNVs had embedded protein coding genes. Of these, 1583 CNVs were present at >5% frequency. We combined multiple contiguous CNVs within the same genomic region and called them Copy Number Variable Region (CNVR). This led to identifying 896 non‐redundant CNV/CNVRs, which encompassed 803 protein coding genes. Genes embedded within CNVs were enriched for several pathways implicated in cachexia and muscle wasting including JAK–STAT signalling, Oncostatin M signalling, Wnt signalling and PI3K‐Akt signalling. This is the first proof of principle GWAS study to identify CNVs as genetic determinants for cancer cachexia. Further, we show that a subset of CNV/CNVR embedded genes identified in the current study are common with the previously published skeletal muscle gene expression datasets, indicating that expression of CNV/CNVR genes in muscle may have functional consequences in patients with cachexia. These genes include CPT1B, SPON1, LOXL1, NFAT5, RBFOX1, and PCSK6 to name a few.ConclusionsThis is the first proof of principle GWAS study to identify CNVs as genetic determinants for cancer cachexia. The data generated will aid in future replication studies in larger cohorts to account for genetic susceptibility to weight loss in patients with cancer cachexia.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Terry Fox Research Institute

Publisher

Wiley

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