Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

Association between genome-wide copy number variation and arsenic-induced skin lesions: a prospective study

Author Affiliations
Chicago Department of Public Health, University of Chicago, Columbia University, University of Illinois Chicago, ...
Published InEnvironmental Health
Year2017
Citations23

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Exposure to arsenic in drinking water is a global health problem and arsenic-induced skin lesions are hallmark of chronic arsenic toxicity. We and others have reported germline genetic variations as risk factors for such skin lesions. The role of copy number variation (CNV) in the germline DNA in this regard is unknown. METHODS: From a large prospectively followed-up cohort, exposed to arsenic, we randomly selected 2171 subjects without arsenic-induced skin lesions at enrollment and genotyped their whole blood DNA samples on Illumina Cyto12v2.1 SNP chips to generate DNA copy number. Participants were followed up every 2 years for a total of 8 years, especially for the development of skin lesions. In Cox regression models, each CNV segment was used…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.