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Contribution of Rare and Low-Frequency Variants to Multiple Sclerosis Susceptibility in the Italian Continental Population

Authors :
Ferdinando Clarelli
Nadia Barizzone
Eleonora Mangano
Miriam Zuccalà
Chiara Basagni
Santosh Anand
Melissa Sorosina
Elisabetta Mascia
Silvia Santoro
PROGEMUS
PROGRESSO
Franca Rosa Guerini
Eleonora Virgilio
Antonio Gallo
Alessandro Pizzino
Cristoforo Comi
Vittorio Martinelli
Giancarlo Comi
Gianluca De Bellis
Maurizio Leone
Massimo Filippi
Federica Esposito
Roberta Bordoni
Filippo Martinelli Boneschi
Sandra D'Alfonso
P Crociani
D Vecchio
P Ragonese
A Gajofatto
E Scarpini
A Bertolotto
D Caputo
C Gasperini
F Granella
S Cordera
P Cavallo
R Cavallo
R Bergamaschi
G Ristori
C Solaro
F Martinelli
F Passantino
M Pugliatti
A Gallo
L Brambilla
C Clerico
F Capone
F Esposito
G Liberatore
M Rodegher
p Rossi
M Radaelli
L Moiola
B Colombo
A Ghezzi
A Annovazzi
R Capra
G Coniglio
M. P Amato
B Nacmias
G Tedeschi
A D’Ambrosio
P Cavalla
F Patti
E D’Amico
D Galimberti
P Gallo
M Atzori
L Grimaldi
S Bucello
G Mancardi
E Capello
Source :
Frontiers in Genetics, Vol 12 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2022.

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies identified over 200 risk loci for multiple sclerosis (MS) focusing on common variants, which account for about 50% of disease heritability. The goal of this study was to investigate whether low-frequency and rare functional variants, located in MS-established associated loci, may contribute to disease risk in a relatively homogeneous population, testing their cumulative effect (burden) with gene-wise tests. We sequenced 98 genes in 588 Italian patients with MS and 408 matched healthy controls (HCs). Variants were selected using different filtering criteria based on allelic frequency and in silico functional impacts. Genes showing a significant burden (n = 17) were sequenced in an independent cohort of 504 MS and 504 HC. The highest signal in both cohorts was observed for the disruptive variants (stop-gain, stop-loss, or splicing variants) located in EFCAB13, a gene coding for a protein of an unknown function (p < 10–4). Among these variants, the minor allele of a stop-gain variant showed a significantly higher frequency in MS versus HC in both sequenced cohorts (p = 0.0093 and p = 0.025), confirmed by a meta-analysis on a third independent cohort of 1298 MS and 1430 HC (p = 0.001) assayed with an SNP array. Real-time PCR on 14 heterozygous individuals for this variant did not evidence the presence of the stop-gain allele, suggesting a transcript degradation by non-sense mediated decay, supported by the evidence that the carriers of the stop-gain variant had a lower expression of this gene (p = 0.0184). In conclusion, we identified a novel low-frequency functional variant associated with MS susceptibility, suggesting the possible role of rare/low-frequency variants in MS as reported for other complex diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16648021
Volume :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.68d0393bd32c4e15a1437e3e4fc9a308
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.800262