Abstract

One of the most relevant risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development is chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, but only a fraction of chronic HBV carriers develop HCC, indicating that complex interactions among viral, environmental and genetic factors lead to HCC in HBV-infected patients. So far, host genetic factors have incompletely been characterized. Therefore, we performed a genome-wide association (GWA) study in a Southern Chinese cohort consisting of 95 HBV-infected HCC patients (cases) and 97 HBV-infected patients without HCC (controls) using the Illumina Human610-Quad BeadChips. The top single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were then validated in an independent cohort of 500 cases and 728 controls. 4 SNPs (rs12682266, rs7821974, rs2275959, rs1573266) at chromosome 8p12 showed consistent association in both the GWA and replication phases (ORcombined = 1.31–1.39; pcombined = 2.71×10−5–5.19×10−4; PARcombined = 26–31%). We found a 2.3-kb expressed sequence tag (EST) in the region using in-silico data mining and verified the existence of the full-length EST experimentally. The expression level of the EST was significantly reduced in human HCC tumors in comparison to the corresponding non-tumorous liver tissues (P<0.001). Results from sequence analysis and in-vitro protein translation study suggest that the transcript might function as a long non-coding RNA. In summary, our study suggests that variations at chromosome 8p12 may promote HCC in patients with HBV. Further functional studies of this region may help understand HBV-associated hepatocarcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • 400 million persons worldwide are chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV) [1,2]

  • genome-wide association (GWA) and replication studies suggest that the 8p12 region contains susceptibility locus for HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)

  • We identified a new candidate susceptibility locus on chromosome 8p12 for HBV-associated HCC in Southern Chinese using GWA study

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Summary

Introduction

400 million persons worldwide are chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV) [1,2]. Carriers of HBV are at an increased risk of developing cirrhosis, hepatic decompensation, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development, especially in the endemic areas of Southeast Asia, China, and Sub-Saharan Africa. The virus is one of the most relevant risk factors for HCC. Only a fraction (incidence rate between 33.5 and 2,632 per 100,000 person-years for men in different populations) of chronic HBV carriers develops HCC. This indicates that complex interactions among viral, environmental and genetic factors lead to HCC in HBV-infected patients. Host genetic factors have incompletely been characterized and only a few studies identified genes potentially conferring genetic susceptibility to HBVassociated HCC [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

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