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Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies African-Specific Susceptibility Loci in African Americans With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Authors :
David J. Cutler
David R. Mack
Jason K. Hou
Mark S. Silverberg
Jonathan P. Bradfield
Ferdouse Begum
Michael D. Kappelman
Chengrui Huang
Michael E. Zwick
Talin Haritunians
Peter J. Mannon
Dermot P.B. McGovern
Howard A. Kader
Kim L. Isaacs
John S. Hanson
Jonathan Steven Alexander
Sharon Dudley-Brown
Dedrick E. Moulton
Jeffrey S. Hyams
Claire L. Simpson
Hakon Hakonarson
Lisa J. Herrinton
John H. Kwon
Stephan R. Targan
Mark Lazarev
Richard Kellermayer
Shehzad Ahmed Saeed
Zhenqiu Liu
Ellen Li
Lisa W. Datta
Gerald W. Dryden
John F. Kuemmerle
David T. Okou
Themistocles Dassopoulos
Subra Kugathasan
Martin Zonca
Jarod Prince
Sunny Z. Hussain
Steven R. Brant
Ashish S. Patel
Antonio Quiros
Barbara S. Kirschner
Jeffry Katz
Lee A. Denson
Tanvi Dhere
Rodney D. Newberry
Suresh Venkateswaran
Pankaj Chopra
Archana Kumar
Raymond K. Cross
Kelly A. Thomas
Bankole O. Osuntokun
Judy H. Cho
Robert N. Baldassano
Jan Micheal A. Klapproth
Richard H. Duerr
Ming-Hsi Wang
Zhi Wei
Jenifer Seminerio
John D. Rioux
John F. Valentine
Source :
Gastroenterology. 152(1)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background & Aims The inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) cause significant morbidity and are increasing in prevalence among all populations, including African Americans. More than 200 susceptibility loci have been identified in populations of predominantly European ancestry, but few loci have been associated with IBD in other ethnicities. Methods We performed 2 high-density, genome-wide scans comprising 2345 cases of African Americans with IBD (1646 with CD, 583 with UC, and 116 inflammatory bowel disease unclassified) and 5002 individuals without IBD (controls, identified from the Health Retirement Study and Kaiser Permanente database). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated at P −8 in meta-analysis with a nominal evidence ( P Results We detected SNPs at HLA-DRB1 , and African-specific SNPs at ZNF649 and LSAMP , with associations of genome-wide significance for UC. We detected SNPs at USP25 with associations of genome-wide significance for IBD. No associations of genome-wide significance were detected for CD. In addition, 9 genes previously associated with IBD contained SNPs with significant evidence for replication ( P −6 ): ADCY3, CXCR6, HLA-DRB1 to HLA-DQA1 (genome-wide significance on conditioning), IL12B, PTGER4, and TNC for IBD; IL23R, PTGER4, and SNX20 (in strong linkage disequilibrium with NOD2 ) for CD; and KCNQ2 (near TNFRSF6B ) for UC. Several of these genes, such as TNC (near TNFSF15 ), CXCR6 , and genes associated with IBD at the HLA locus, contained SNPs with unique association patterns with African-specific alleles. Conclusions We performed a genome-wide association study of African Americans with IBD and identified loci associated with UC in only this population; we also replicated IBD, CD, and UC loci identified in European populations. The detection of variants associated with IBD risk in only people of African descent demonstrates the importance of studying the genetics of IBD and other complex diseases in populations beyond those of European ancestry.

Details

ISSN :
15280012
Volume :
152
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32d2bbd69d409f146e4bbcf169f63085