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Joint genotype and ancestry analysis identify novel loci associated with atopic dermatitis in African American population.

Authors :
Gautam Y
Satish L
Ramirez S
Grashel B
Biagini JM
Martin LJ
Rothenberg ME
Khurana Hershey GK
Mersha TB
Source :
HGG advances [HGG Adv] 2024 Sep 07, pp. 100350. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 07.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic itchy inflammatory disease of the skin. Genetic studies have identified multiple risk factors linked to the disease; however, most of studies have been derived from European and East Asian populations. The admixed genome of African American (AA) may provide an opportunity to discovery ancestry-specific loci involved in AD susceptibility. Herein, we present joint analysis of ancestry and genotype effects followed with validation using differential gene expression analysis on AD using 710 AD cases and 1015 non-AD controls from the AA population, genotyped using MEGA followed by imputation using the CAAPA reference panel. The joint analysis identified two novel AD-susceptibility loci, rs2195989 in gene ANGPT1 (8q23.1) and rs62538818 in the intergenic region LURAP1L-MPDZ (9p23). Admixture mapping (AM) results showed potential genomic inflation, and we implemented genomic control and identified five ancestry-of-origin loci with European ancestry effects. The multi-omics functional prioritization of variants in AM signals prioritized the loci SLAIN2, RNF39, and FOXA2. GWAS identified variants significantly associated with AD in the AA population, including SGK1 (rs113357522, OR = 2.81), EFR3A (rs16904552, OR = 1.725), and MMP14 (rs911912, OR = 1.791). GWAS variants were common in the AA but rare in the European population, which suggests an African ancestry-specific risk of AD. Four genes (ANGPT1, LURAP1L, EFR3A, and SGK1) were further validated using qPCR from AD and healthy skin. This study highlighted the importance of genetic studies on admixed populations, as well as local ancestry and genotype-ancestry joint effects to identify risk loci for AD.<br /> (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2666-2477
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
HGG advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39245941
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2024.100350