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Variation in PU.1 binding and chromatin looping at neutrophil enhancers influences autoimmune disease susceptibility

Authors :
Laura Clarke
Hannes Ponstingl
Manuel Tardaguila
Lu Chen
Tomi Pastinen
Javierre B-M.
Stephen B. Watt
Mattia Frontini
Nicole Soranzo
Mikhail Spivakov
Ben Farr
Louella Vasquez
Frances Burden
Alice L. Mann
David J. Richardson
Heather Elding
Ying Yan
Kousik Kundu
S. Farrow
Paul Flicek
Klaudia Walter
Avik Datta
Daniel Mead
Simone Ecker
Kate Downes
Valentina Iotchkova
Peter Fraser
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Neutrophils play fundamental roles in innate inflammatory response, shape adaptive immunity1, and have been identified as a potentially causal cell type underpinning genetic associations with immune system traits and diseases2,3 The majority of these variants are non-coding and the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Here, we profiled the binding of one of the principal myeloid transcriptional regulators, PU.1, in primary neutrophils across nearly a hundred volunteers, and elucidate the coordinated genetic effects of PU.1 binding variation, local chromatin state, promoter-enhancer interactions and gene expression. We show that PU.1 binding and the associated chain of molecular changes underlie genetically-driven differences in cell count and autoimmune disease susceptibility. Our results advance interpretation for genetic loci associated with neutrophil biology and immune disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....108e8fad0d3177cce538f76ae37ae493
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/620260