1. Prioritization of autoimmune disease-associated genetic variants that perturb regulatory element activity in T cells
- Author
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Michael H. Guo, Ryan Tewhey, Nir Hacohen, de Boer Cg, Gregory A. Newby, David R. Liu, Matteo Gentili, Mouri K, and John P. Ray
- Subjects
Autoimmune disease ,Genetics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,T cell ,medicine ,Genetic variants ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Locus (genetics) ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Gene ,Chromatin ,Genetic association - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies have uncovered hundreds of autoimmune disease-associated loci; however, the causal genetic variant(s) within each locus are mostly unknown. Here, we perform high-throughput allele-specific reporter assays to prioritize disease-associated variants for five autoimmune diseases. By examining variants that both promote allele-specific reporter expression and are located in accessible chromatin, we identify 60 putatively causal variants that enrich for statistically fine-mapped variants by up to 57.8-fold. We introduced the risk allele of a prioritized variant (rs72928038) into a human T cell line and deleted the orthologous sequence in mice, both resulting in reduced BACH2 expression. Naïve CD8 T cells from mice containing the deletion had reduced expression of genes that suppress activation and maintain stemness. Our results represent an example of an effective approach for prioritizing variants and studying their physiologically relevant effects.
- Published
- 2021