Abstract

Abstract Genome wide association studies (GWAS) have mapped multiple independent cancer risk loci (n = 6) to a small region on chr5p15.33 for at least ten distinct cancers, including bladder, breast, glioma, lung, melanoma, non-melanoma skin, ovarian, pancreas, prostate, and testicular germ cell cancer. This region harbors two plausible target genes, TERT which encodes the catalytic subunit of telomerase reverse transcriptase which maintains chromosome ends by adding telomeres repeats, and CLPTM1L which encodes the cleft lip and palate transmembrane protein 1-like protein which promotes cancer cell growth, protect cells from apoptosis, and can induce abnormal cytokinesis. The most significant pancreatic cancer GWAS SNP on chr5p15.33 was rs401681 (P = 3.7×10−7, OR = 1.19), located in the 13th intron of the CLPTM1L gene and within the independent multi-cancer risk locus in this region most distant from TERT. Imputation and fine mapping in pancreatic cancer resolved this signal by three orders of magnitude (P = 1.4×10−10, OR = 1.30) to a set of seven highly correlated SNPs. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) and luciferase assays across these SNPs led us to a single SNP, rs36115365, that showed allele-specific effects in both assays and overlapped with prominent ENCODE marks indicating regulatory potential. Examining this SNP across cell lines derived from multiple types of cancer linked to this locus, specifically pancreatic, testicular, lung, and melanoma, established a consistent pattern of a specific protein binding and enhanced regulatory activity for the risk allele across eight cancer cell lines (two cell lines per cancer type). siRNA-based targeting of the putative gene regulatory-region harboring rs36115365 resulted in a strong inhibition of TERT expression (average 60%, range 45-85%) but no effect on CLPTM1L expression. This inhibition of TERT expression was stronger from the pancreatic cancer risk as compared to the protective allele. Quantitative mass spectrometry identified Zinc finger protein 148 (ZNF148) as the protein specifically binding the risk allele, further supported by direct and allele-specific binding of purified recombinant ZNF148 in EMSA assays. Lastly, siRNA-mediated knockdown of ZNF148 resulted in significant reduction of TERT but not CLPTM1L expression across multiple cancer cell lines. Our results indicate that the pancreatic cancer GWAS signal at the single independent chr5p15.33 multi-cancer risk locus most distant from TERT may be explained by a single SNP that influences TERT expression via ZNF148. Citation Format: Kevin M. Brown, Jun Fang, Jinping Jia, Zhaoming Wang, Matthew Makowski, Tongwu Zhang, Jason Hoskins, Jiyeon Choi, Younghun Han, Mingfeng Zhang, Mai Xu, Peter Kanetsky, Andresson Thorkell, Gloria M. Petersen, Katherine L. Nathanson, Christopher I. Amos, Maria T. Landi, Stephen J. Chanock, Michiel Vermeulen, Laufey T. Amundadottir. Functional characterization of a multicancer risk locus on chr5p15.33 reveals regulation of TERT by ZNF148. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 4610. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-4610

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