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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study identifies multiple HLA loci for sarcoidosis susceptibility.

Liao SY, Jacobson S, Hamzeh NY et al.

37399103 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2599 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LS
Liao SY
JS
Jacobson S
HN
Hamzeh NY
CD
Culver DA
BB
Barkes BQ
MM
Mroz M
MK
Macphail K
PK
Pacheco K
PD
Patel DC
WY
Wasfi YS
KL
Koth LL
LC
Langefeld CD
LS
Leach SM
WE
White E
MC
Montgomery C
ML
Maier LA
FT
Fingerlin TE
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Sarcoidosis is a complex systemic disease. Our study aimed to (1) identify novel alleles associated with sarcoidosis susceptibility; (2) provide an in-depth evaluation of HLA alleles and sarcoidosis susceptibility and (3) integrate genetic and transcription data to identify risk loci that may more directly impact disease pathogenesis. We report a genome-wide association study of 1335 sarcoidosis cases and 1264 controls of European descent (EA) and investigate associated alleles in a study of African Americans (AA: 1487 cases and 1504 controls). The EA and AA cohort was recruited from multiple United States sites. HLA alleles were imputed and tested for association with sarcoidosis susceptibility. Expression quantitative locus and colocalization analysis were performed using a subset of subjects with transcriptome data. Forty-nine SNPs in the HLA region in HLA-DRA, -DRB9, -DRB5, -DQA1 and BRD2 genes were significantly associated with sarcoidosis susceptibility in EA, rs3129888 was also a risk variant for sarcoidosis in AA. Classical HLA alleles DRB1*0101, DQA1*0101 and DQB1*0501, which are highly correlated, were also associated with sarcoidosis. rs3135287 near HLA-DRA was associated with HLA-DRA expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and bronchoalveolar lavage from subjects and lung tissue and whole blood from GTEx. We identified six novel SNPs (out of the seven SNPs representing the 49 significant SNPs) and nine HLA alleles associated with sarcoidosis susceptibility in the largest EA population. We also replicated our findings in an AA population. Our study reiterates the potential role of antigen recognition and/or presentation HLA class II genes in sarcoidosis pathogenesis.

1,335 European ancestry cases, 1,264 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2599
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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