Matthew A. Lee,Charlie Hatcher,Emma Hazelwood,Lucy J. Goudswaard,Konstantinos K. Tsilidis,Emma E. Vincent,Richard M. Martin,Karl Smith-Byrne,Hermann Brenner,Iona Cheng,Sun‐Seog Kweon,Loı̈c Le Marchand,Polly A. Newcomb,Robert E. Schoen,Ulrike Peters,Marc J. Gunter,Bethany Van Guelpen,Neil Murphy
出处
期刊:Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - medRxiv日期:2024-02-13被引量:1
Abstract Adiposity is an established risk factor for colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the pathways underlying this relationship, and specifically the role of the circulating proteome, is unclear. Utilizing two-sample Mendelian randomization and colocalization, based on summary data from large sex-combined and sex-specific genetic studies, we estimated the univariable (UV) associations between: (I) adiposity measures (body mass index, BMI; waist hip ratio, WHR) and overall and site-specific (colon, proximal colon, distal colon, and rectal) CRC risk, (II) adiposity measures and plasma proteins, and (III) adiposity-associated plasma proteins and CRC risk. We used multivariable MR (MVMR) to investigate the potential mediating role of adiposity- and CRC-related proteins in the adiposity-CRC association. BMI and WHR were positively associated with CRC risk, with similar associations by anatomical tumour site. 6,591 adiposity-protein (2,628 unique proteins) and 33 protein-CRC (8 unique proteins) associations were identified using UVMR and colocalization. 1 protein, GREM1 was associated with BMI only and CRC outcomes in a manner that was consistent with a potential mediating role in sex-combined and female-specific analyses. In MVMR, adjusting the BMI-CRC association for GREM1, effect estimates were attenuated - suggestive of a potential mediating role - most strongly for the BMI-overall CRC association in women. These results highlight the impact of adiposity on the plasma proteome and of adiposity-associated circulating proteins on the risk of CRC. Supported by evidence from cis -SNP UVMR and colocalization analyses, GREM1 was identified as a potential mediator of the BMI-CRC association, particularly in women, and warrants further experimental investigation.