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Genetic variants for head size share genes and pathways with cancer

Authors
Maria Knol,Raymond Poot
Tavia Evans,Claudia Satizábal,Aniket Mishra,Sandra Auwera,Marie‐Gabrielle Duperron,Xueqiu Jian,Isabel Hostettler,Dianne Dam-Nolen,Sander Lamballais,Mikołaj Pawlak,Cora Lewis,Amaia Carrión-Castillo,Theo Erp,Céline Reinbold,Jean Shin,Markus Scholz,Asta Håberg,Anders Kämpe,Gloria Li,Reut Avinun,Joshua Atkins,Fang‐Chi Hsu,Alyssa Amod,Max Lam,Ami Tsuchida,Mariel Teunissen,Alexa Beiser,Frauke Beyer,Joshua Bis,Daniel Bos,R. Bryan,Robin Bülow,Svenja Caspers,Gwénaëlle Catheline,Charlotte Cecil,Shareefa Dalvie,Jean‐François Dartigues,Charles DeCarli,Maria Enlund-Cerullo,Judith Ford,Barbara Franke,Barry Freedman,Nele Friedrich,Melissa Green,Simon Haworth,Catherine Helmer,Per Hoffmann,Georg Homuth,M. Ikram,Clifford Jack,Neda Jahanshad,Christiane Jockwitz,Yoichiro Kamatani,Annchen Knodt,Shuo Li,Keane Lim,W. Longstreth,Fabìo Macciardi,Outi Mäkitie,Bernard Mazoyer,Sarah Medland,Susumu Miyamoto,Susanne Moebus,Thomas Mosley,Ryan Muetzel,Thomas Mühleisen,Manabu Nagata,Soichiro Nakahara,Nicholette Palmer,Zdenka Pausová,Adrian Preda,Yann Quidé,William Reay,Gennady Roshchupkin,Reinhold Schmidt,Pamela Schreiner,Kazuya Setoh,Chin Shapland,Stephen Sidney,Beaté Pourcain,Jason Stein,Yasuharu Tabara,Alexander Teumer,Anne Uhlmann,Aad Lugt,Meike Vernooij,David Werring,B. Windham,A. Witte,Katharina Wittfeld,Qiong Yang,Kazumichi Yoshida,Han Brunner,Quentin Grand,Kang Sim,Dan Stein,Donald Bowden,Murray Cairns,Ahmad Hariri,Ching‐Lung Cheung,Sture Andersson,Arno Villringer,Tomáš Paus,Sven Cichon,Vince Calhoun,Fabrice Crivello,Lenore Launer,Tonya White,Peter Koudstaal,Henry Houlden,Myriam Fornage,Fumihiko Matsuda,Hans Grabe,Stéphanie Debette,Paul Thompson,Sudha Seshadri
+116 authors
,Hieab Adams
Published
Jul 16, 2020
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Abstract

Abstract The size of the human head is determined by growth in the first years of life, while the rest of the body typically grows until early adulthood 1 . Such complex developmental processes are regulated by various genes and growth pathways 2 . Rare genetic syndromes have revealed genes that affect head size 3 , but the genetic drivers of variation in head size within the general population remain largely unknown. To elucidate biological pathways underlying the growth of the human head, we performed the largest genome-wide association study on human head size to date (N = 79,107). We identified 67 genetic loci, 50 of which are novel, and found that these loci are preferentially associated with head size and mostly independent from height. In subsequent neuroimaging analyses, the majority of genetic variants demonstrated widespread effects on the brain, whereas the effects of 17 variants could be localized to one or two specific brain regions. Through hypothesis-free approaches, we find a strong overlap of head size variants with both cancer pathways and cancer genes. Gene set analyses showed enrichment for different types of cancer and the p53, Wnt and ErbB signalling pathway. Genes overlapping or close to lead variants – such as TP53 , PTEN and APC – were enriched for genes involved in macrocephaly syndromes (up to 37-fold) and high-fidelity cancer genes (up to 9-fold), whereas this enrichment was not seen for human height variants. This indicates that genes regulating early brain and cranial growth are associated with a propensity to neoplasia later in life, irrespective of height. Our results warrant further investigations of the link between head size and cancer, as well as its clinical implications in the general population.

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