Elevated antibodies against Epstein-Barr virus among individuals predicted to carry nasopharyngeal carcinoma susceptibility variants
Journal
Journal of General Virology
Journal Volume
99
Journal Issue
9
Pages
1268-1273
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Coghill A.E
Hsu W.-L
Yang Q
Yu K.J
Yu G
Diehl S.R
Chen C.-J
Goldstein A.M
Hildesheim A.
Abstract
Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) is an obligatory factor in the development of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), and anti-EBV IgA antibodies are elevated many years prior to the development of NPC. Nearly all adults are infected with EBV, but only a few develop cancer, suggesting that additional co-factors, including genetic susceptibility, must be required for the disease to manifest. Individuals were selected from the Taiwan Family Study, a cohort of 3389 individuals from NPC multiplex families. Primary analyses were conducted among 671 individuals from 69 pedigrees with the strongest family history of disease (>3 NPC-affected family members). The likelihood that a given family member carried a NPC susceptibility variant was estimated using Mendelian segregation rules, assuming a dominant mode of inheritance. We compared anti-EBV IgA antibody seropositivity between family members predicted to be carriers of NPC-linked genetic variants and those with a lower likelihood of carrying such variants. Obligate carriers of NPC susceptibility variants (100 % predicted probability of harbouring the genetic mutation) were nine-fold more likely to be anti-EBV IgA positive compared to family members predicted not to carry disease-causing variants (OR=9.2; P-trend<0.001). This elevated risk was confirmed in analyses restricted to both unaffected individuals and pedigrees with EBV-related pathway variants identified through exome sequencing. Our data indicate that family members who are more likely to carry NPC susceptibility variants are also more likely to be anti-EBNA1 IgA seropositive. Genetic susceptibility associated with control over this common herpes virus is likely a co-factor in determining which EBV-infected adults develop NPC. ? 2018 The Authors.
SDGs
Other Subjects
immunoglobulin A antibody; immunoglobulin A; virus antibody; Article; cohort analysis; Epstein Barr virus; family history; gene mutation; genetic linkage; genetic susceptibility; genetic variability; heterozygote; human; major clinical study; nasopharynx carcinoma; nonhuman; pedigree; predictive value; priority journal; risk assessment; Taiwan; whole exome sequencing; blood; carcinoma; Epstein Barr virus; female; genetic predisposition; genetic variation; genetics; male; nasopharynx tumor; virology; Antibodies, Viral; Carcinoma; Female; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Genetic Variation; Herpesvirus 4, Human; Humans; Immunoglobulin A; Male; Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms
Publisher
Microbiology Society
Type
journal article