Assessment of Polymorphic Variants in the Melanocortin-1 Receptor Gene with Cutaneous Pigmentation Using an Evolutionary Approach
The melanocortin-1 receptor gene ( MC1R ) encodes a membrane-bound receptor protein that is central to melanin synthesis. The coding region of MC1R is highly polymorphic and associations of variants with pigmentation phenotypes and risk for cutaneous neoplasms have been reported. We sought to determ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 2004-05, Vol.13 (5), p.808-819 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The melanocortin-1 receptor gene ( MC1R ) encodes a membrane-bound receptor protein that is central to melanin synthesis. The coding region of MC1R is highly polymorphic and associations of variants with pigmentation phenotypes and risk for cutaneous neoplasms have been
reported. We sought to determine the distribution and frequency of MC1R variants and their relationship to pigmentation characteristics in 179 Caucasian controls from the United States. One hundred
thirty-five (75.4%) subjects carried one or more variants, and we determined that carriage of the previously designated “red
hair color” (RHC) alleles, R151C, R160W, and D294H was strongly associated with fair pigmentation phenotypes including light
hair and eye color, tendency to burn, decreased tendency to tan, and freckling. We used SIFT software to define MC1R protein
positions that were predicted intolerant to amino acid substitutions; detected variants that corresponded to intolerant substitutions
were D84E, R142H, R151C, I155T, R160W, and D294H. Carriage of one or more of these putative functionally important variants
or the frameshift variant ins86A was significantly associated with fair pigmentation phenotypes. Analyses limited to carriage
of ins86A and the three non-RHC alleles identified by SIFT were attenuated and no longer reached statistical significance.
This is the first study to describe MC1R variants among control subjects from the U.S. Our results indicate that the frequency of variants is similar to that previously
observed among non-U.S. Caucasians. Risk variants defined by either the published literature or by evolutionary criteria are
strongly and significantly associated with all fair pigmentation phenotypes that were measured. |
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ISSN: | 1055-9965 1538-7755 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1055-9965.808.13.5 |