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Evidence from genome wide association studies implicates reduced control of Epstein-Barr virus infection in multiple sclerosis susceptibility

Authors :
Monica A. I. Basuki
David Brown
Nicole Fewings
Grant P Parnell
David R. Booth
Stephen D. Schibeci
Graeme J. Stewart
Sanjay Swaminathan
Bruce V. Taylor
Yuan Zhou
Ali Afrasiabi
Fiona C. McKay
Ramya Chandramohan
Source :
Genome Medicine, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2019), Genome Medicine
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMC, 2019.

Abstract

Background Genome wide association studies have identified > 200 susceptibility loci accounting for much of the heritability of multiple sclerosis (MS). Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a memory B cell tropic virus, has been identified as necessary but not sufficient for development of MS. The molecular and immunological basis for this has not been established. Infected B cell proliferation is driven by signalling through the EBV produced cell surface protein LMP1, a homologue of the MS risk gene CD40. Methods We have investigated transcriptomes of B cells and EBV-infected B cells at Latency III (LCLs) and identified MS risk genes with altered expression on infection and with expression levels associated with the MS risk genotype (LCLeQTLs). The association of LCLeQTL genomic burden with EBV phenotypes in vitro and in vivo was examined. The risk genotype effect on LCL proliferation with CD40 stimulation was assessed. Results These LCLeQTL MS risk SNP:gene pairs (47 identified) were over-represented in genes dysregulated between B and LCLs (p

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6a2783ea52242da8a6416e09a039ad3