Disease areas:
  • cancer and other tissue growths
Last updated:
Author(s):
Roni Rasnic, Nathan Linial, Michal Linial
Publish date:
10 August 2020
Journal:
Scientific Reports
PubMed ID:
32778766

Abstract

It is estimated that up to 10% of cancer incidents are attributed to inherited genetic alterations. Despite extensive research, there are still gaps in our understanding of genetic predisposition to cancer. It was theorized that ultra-rare variants partially account for the missing heritable component. We harness the UK BioBank dataset of ~ 500,000 individuals, 14% of which were diagnosed with cancer, to detect ultra-rare, possibly high-penetrance cancer predisposition variants. We report on 115 cancer-exclusive ultra-rare variations and nominate 26 variants with additional independent evidence as cancer predisposition variants. We conclude that population cohorts are valuable source for expanding the collection of novel cancer predisposition genes.

Related projects

Finding associations between genotypes to phenotypes (GWAS) is crucial for future precise personalized medicine. Current approaches are very limited due to the small number of…

Institution:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

All projects