Abstract

Pleiotropic genetic factors (e.g., DNA polymorphisms) may be involved in the initiation of neuroblastoma (NB) and coronary artery disease (CAD) given their common origin from defects in neural crest development. To discover novel NB susceptibility genes, we conducted a three-stage survey including a meta-analysis of NB and CAD genome-wide association data, prioritization of NB causal variants, and validation in an independent cohort of affected individuals-control subjects. The lead SNP, rs13337397 at the 16q23.1 locus, associated with both diseases in the meta-analysis and with NB in the validation study. All the SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with rs13337397 were annotated using the H3K27ac epigenetic marker of neural crest cells (NCC) and NB cell lines. Indeed, we identified the functional SNP rs13337017, mapping within an enhancer of NCCs and NB cell lines and showing long-range interactions with CFDP1 by Hi-C analysis. Luciferase assays indicated that the risk allele of rs13337017 increased CFDP1 expression in NB cell lines. Of note, CFDP1 high expression associated with unfavorable prognostic markers in an analysis including 498 NB transcriptomes. Moreover, depletion of CFDP1 markedly decreased viability and migration and increased apoptotic rates in NB cell lines. Finally, transcriptome and qPCR analyses revealed that the depletion of CFDP1 may affect noradrenergic neuron differentiation by downregulating master regulators of sympathetic noradrenergic identity, including PHOX2B, HAND2, and GATA3. Our data strongly suggest that CFDP1 acts as oncogene in NB. In addition, we provide evidence that genetic predisposition to NB can be mediated by the alteration of noradrenergic lineage-specific gene expression.

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