Skin cancer risk for freckly red-heads
equivalent to 21 years in sun
Send a link to a friend
[July 13, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Having genes that give
you red hair, pale skin and freckles increases your risk of developing
skin cancer as much as an extra 21 years' exposure to the sun,
researchers said on Tuesday.
|
Their study found gene variants that produce red hair and freckly,
fair skin were linked to a higher number of mutations that lead to
skin cancers. The researchers said even people with one copy of the
crucial MC1R gene - who may be fair-skinned but not have red hair -
have a higher risk.
"It has been known for a while that a person with red hair has an
increased likelihood of developing skin cancer, but this is the
first time that the gene has been proven to be associated with skin
cancers with more mutations," said David Adams, who co-led the study
at Britain's Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.
"Unexpectedly, we also showed that people with only a single copy of
the gene variant still have a much higher number of tumor mutations
than the rest of the population."
Redheads make up between 1 and 2 percent of the world's population,
but about 6 percent in Britain. They have two copies of a variant of
the MC1R gene which affects the type of melanin pigment they
produce, leading to red hair, freckles, pale skin and a strong
tendency to burn in the sun.
Exposure to ultraviolet light from either the sun or sunbeds causes
damage to DNA and scientists think the type of skin pigment linked
to redheads may allow more UV to reach the DNA.
In this latest study, the researchers found that while this may be
one factor in the damage, there are also others linked to the
crucial MC1R gene.
The team, whose work was published in the journal Nature
Communications, analyzed data from of tumor DNA sequences collected
from more than 400 people with cancer. They found an average of 42
percent more sun-associated mutations in tumors from people carrying
the MC1R gene variant.
[to top of second column] |
The research showed the MC1R gene variation not only increased the
number of spontaneous mutations caused by sunlight, but also raised
the level of other mutations in the tumors.
This suggests, the researchers said, that there are biological
processes in the way cancer develops in people with MC1R variation
that are not only related to ultraviolet light.
"This ... explains why red-haired people have to be so careful about
covering up in strong sun," said Julie Sharp of the charity Cancer
Research UK, which co-funded the research.
"It also underlines that it isn't just people with red hair who need
to protect themselves from too much sun."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; editing by Andrew Roche)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|