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GWAS Study

Functional implications of disease-specific variants in loci jointly associated with coeliac disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

Gutierrez-Achury J, Zorro MM, Ricaño-Ponce I et al.

26546613 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
46684 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GJ
Gutierrez-Achury J
ZM
Zorro MM
RI
Ricaño-Ponce I
ZD
Zhernakova DV
DD
Diogo D
RS
Raychaudhuri S
FL
Franke L
TG
Trynka G
WC
Wijmenga C
ZA
Zhernakova A
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Hundreds of genomic loci have been associated with a significant number of immune-mediated diseases, and a large proportion of these associated loci are shared among traits. Both the molecular mechanisms by which these loci confer disease susceptibility and the extent to which shared loci are implicated in a common pathogenesis are unknown. We therefore sought to dissect the functional components at loci shared between two autoimmune diseases: coeliac disease (CeD) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We used a cohort of 12 381 CeD cases and 7827 controls, and another cohort of 13 819 RA cases and 12 897 controls, all genotyped with the Immunochip platform. In the joint analysis, we replicated 19 previously identified loci shared by CeD and RA and discovered five new non-HLA loci shared by CeD and RA. Our fine-mapping results indicate that in nine of 24 shared loci the associated variants are distinct in the two diseases. Using cell-type-specific histone markers, we observed that loci which pointed to the same variants in both diseases were enriched for marks of promoters active in CD14+ and CD34+ immune cells (P < 0.001), while loci pointing to distinct variants in one of the two diseases showed enrichment for marks of more specialized cell types, like CD4+ regulatory T cells in CeD (P < 0.0001) compared with Th17 and CD15+ in RA (P = 0.0029).

371 South Asian ancestry celiac disease cases, 3,138 European ancestry celiac disease cases, 4,418 European ancestry rheumatoid arthritis cases, 509 South Asian ancestry celiac disease controls, 2,473 European ancestry celiac disease controls, 3,300 European ancestry rheumatoid arthritis controls, 8,872 celiac disease cases, 9,401 rheumatoid arthritis cases, 4,845 celiac disease controls, 9,627 rheumatoid arthritis controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

46684
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, South Asian
Ancestry
U.S., Netherlands, U.K., Sweden, Poland, Italy, Spain, India
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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