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Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Vol. 14, 2563-2568, November 2005
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research

The Interaction of Four Genes in the Inflammation Pathway Significantly Predicts Prostate Cancer Risk

Jianfeng Xu1,2, James Lowey3, Fredrik Wiklund6, Jielin Sun1, Fredrik Lindmark6, Fang-Chi Hsu2, Latchezar Dimitrov1, Baoli Chang1, Aubrey R. Turner1, Wennan Liu1, Hans-Olov Adami7, Edward Suh3, Jason H. Moore4, S. Lilly Zheng1, William B. Isaacs5, Jeffrey M. Trent3 and Henrik Grönberg6

1 Center for Human Genomics and 2 Department of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; 3 Translational Genomics Research Institute, Phoenix, Arizona; 4 Computational Genetics Laboratory, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire; 5 Department of Urology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland; 6 Oncology, Department of Radiation Sciences, University of Umeå, Umeå; and 7 Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

Requests for reprints: Jianfeng Xu, Center for Human Genomics, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157. Phone: 336-713-7500; Fax: 336-713-7566. E-mail: jxu{at}wfubmc.edu

It is widely hypothesized that the interactions of multiple genes influence individual risk to prostate cancer. However, current efforts at identifying prostate cancer risk genes primarily rely on single-gene approaches. In an attempt to fill this gap, we carried out a study to explore the joint effect of multiple genes in the inflammation pathway on prostate cancer risk. We studied 20 genes in the Toll-like receptor signaling pathway as well as several cytokines. For each of these genes, we selected and genotyped haplotype-tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) among 1,383 cases and 780 controls from the CAPS (CAncer Prostate in Sweden) study population. A total of 57 SNPs were included in the final analysis. A data mining method, multifactor dimensionality reduction, was used to explore the interaction effects of SNPs on prostate cancer risk. Interaction effects were assessed for all possible n SNP combinations, where n = 2, 3, or 4. For each n SNP combination, the model providing lowest prediction error among 100 cross-validations was chosen. The statistical significance levels of the best models in each n SNP combination were determined using permutation tests. A four-SNP interaction (one SNP each from IL-10, IL-1RN, TIRAP, and TLR5) had the lowest prediction error (43.28%, P = 0.019). Our ability to analyze a large number of SNPs in a large sample size is one of the first efforts in exploring the effect of high-order gene-gene interactions on prostate cancer risk, and this is an important contribution to this new and quickly evolving field.




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Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
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Copyright © 2005 by the American Association for Cancer Research.