Carcinomas are common in humans but rare among closely related “great apes.” Plausible explanations, including human-specific genomic alterations affecting the biology of sialic acids, are proposed, but causality remains unproven. Here, an integrated evolutionary genetics-phenome-transcriptome approach studied the role of SIGLEC12 gene (encoding Siglec-XII) in epithelial transformation and cancer. Exogenous expression of the protein in cell lines and genetically engineered mice recapitulated approximately 30% of the human population in whom the protein is expressed in a form that cannot bind ligand because of a fixed, homozygous, human-universal missense mutation. Siglec-XII–null cells/mice recapitulated the remaining approximately 70% of the human population in whom an additional polymorphic frameshift mutation eliminates the entire protein. Siglec-XII expression drove several pro-oncogenic phenotypes in cell lines and increased tumor burden in mice challenged with chemical carcinogen and inflammation. Transcriptomic studies yielded a 29-gene signature of Siglec-XII–positive disease and when used as a computational tool for navigating human data sets, pinpointed with surprising precision that SIGLEC12 expression (model) recapitulates a very specific type of colorectal carcinomas (disease) that is associated with mismatch-repair defects and inflammation, disproportionately affects European Americans, and carries a favorable prognosis. They revealed a hitherto-unknown evolutionary genetic mechanism for an ethnic/environmental predisposition of carcinogenesis.
Hector A. Cuello, Saptarshi Sinha, Andrea L. Verhagen, Nissi Varki, Ajit Varki, Pradipta Ghosh
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