Back to Search Start Over

Genome-wide association study in a Korean population identifies six novel susceptibility loci for rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors :
Young-Chang Kwon
Jiwoo Lim
So-Young Bang
Eunji Ha
Mi Yeong Hwang
Kyungheon Yoon
Jung-Yoon Choe
Dae-Hyun Yoo
Shin-Seok Lee
Jisoo Lee
Won Tae Chung
Tae-Hwan Kim
Yoon-Kyoung Sung
Seung-Cheol Shim
Chan-Bum Choi
Jae-Bum Jun
Young Mo Kang
Jung-Min Shin
Yeon-Kyung Lee
Soo-Kyung Cho
Source :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases; Nov2020, Vol. 79 Issue 11, p1438-1445, 8p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have discovered over 100 RA loci, explaining patient-relevant RA pathogenesis but showing a large fraction of missing heritability. As a continuous effort, we conducted GWAS in a large Korean RA case-control population.<bold>Methods: </bold>We newly generated genome-wide variant data in two independent Korean cohorts comprising 4068 RA cases and 36 487 controls, followed by a whole-genome imputation and a meta-analysis of the disease association results in the two cohorts. By integrating publicly available omics data with the GWAS results, a series of bioinformatic analyses were conducted to prioritise the RA-risk genes in RA loci and to dissect biological mechanisms underlying disease associations.<bold>Results: </bold>We identified six new RA-risk loci (SLAMF6, CXCL13, SWAP70, NFKBIA, ZFP36L1 and LINC00158) with pmeta<5×10-8 and consistent disease effect sizes in the two cohorts. A total of 122 genes were prioritised from the 6 novel and 13 replicated RA loci based on physical distance, regulatory variants and chromatin interaction. Bioinformatics analyses highlighted potentially RA-relevant tissues (including immune tissues, lung and small intestine) with tissue-specific expression of RA-associated genes and suggested the immune-related gene sets (such as CD40 pathway, IL-21-mediated pathway and citrullination) and the risk-allele sharing with other diseases.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>This study identified six new RA-associated loci that contributed to better understanding of the genetic aetiology and biology in RA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00034967
Volume :
79
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146502415
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-217663