Genetic drivers and cellular selection of female mosaic X chromosome loss Journal Article


Authors: Liu, A.; Genovese, G.; Zhao, Y.; Pirinen, M.; Zekavat, S. M.; Kentistou, K. A.; Yang, Z.; Yu, K.; Vlasschaert, C.; Liu, X.; Brown, D. W.; Hudjashov, G.; Gorman, B. R.; Dennis, J.; Zhou, W.; Momozawa, Y.; Pyarajan, S.; Tuzov, V.; Pajuste, F. D.; Aavikko, M.; Sipilä, T. P.; Ghazal, A.; Huang, W. Y.; Freedman, N. D.; Song, L.; Gardner, E. J.; FinnGen; Estonian Biobank Research Team; Breast Cancer Association Consortium; Million Veteran Program; Sankaran, V. G.; Palotie, A.; Ollila, H. M.; Tukiainen, T.; Chanock, S. J.; Mägi, R.; Natarajan, P.; Daly, M. J.; Bick, A.; McCarroll, S. A.; Terao, C.; Loh, P. R.; Ganna, A.; Perry, J. R. B.; Machiela, M. J.
Contributor: Offit, K.
Article Title: Genetic drivers and cellular selection of female mosaic X chromosome loss
Abstract: Mosaic loss of the X chromosome (mLOX) is the most common clonal somatic alteration in leukocytes of female individuals(1,2), but little is known about its genetic determinants or phenotypic consequences. Here, to address this, we used data from 883,574 female participants across 8 biobanks; 12% of participants exhibited detectable mLOX in approximately 2% of leukocytes. Female participants with mLOX had an increased risk of myeloid and lymphoid leukaemias. Genetic analyses identified 56 common variants associated with mLOX, implicating genes with roles in chromosomal missegregation, cancer predisposition and autoimmune diseases. Exome-sequence analyses identified rare missense variants in FBXO10 that confer a twofold increased risk of mLOX. Only a small fraction of associations was shared with mosaic Y chromosome loss, suggesting that distinct biological processes drive formation and clonal expansion of sex chromosome missegregation. Allelic shift analyses identified X chromosome alleles that are preferentially retained in mLOX, demonstrating variation at many loci under cellular selection. A polygenic score including 44 allelic shift loci correctly inferred the retained X chromosomes in 80.7% of mLOX cases in the top decile. Our results support a model in which germline variants predispose female individuals to acquiring mLOX, with the allelic content of the X chromosome possibly shaping the magnitude of clonal expansion.
Keywords: survival; risk; blood; association; common; landscape; inactivation; region; biobank
Journal Title: Nature
Volume: 631
Issue: 8019
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2024-07-04
Start Page: 134
End Page: 141
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001398346400001
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07533-7
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 38867047
Notes: Erratum published at DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08215-0 -- Source: Wos
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  1. Kenneth Offit
    788 Offit