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Pooled genome wide association detects association upstream of FCRL3 with Graves' disease.

Authors :
Jwu Jin Khong
Burdon, Kathryn P.
Yi Lu
Laurie, Kate
Leonardos, Lefta
Baird, Paul N.
Sahebjada, Srujana
Walsh, John P.
Gajdatsy, Adam
Ebeling, Peter R.
Hamblin, Peter Shane
Wong, Rosemary
Forehan, Simon P.
Fourlanos, Spiros
Roberts, Anthony P.
Doogue, Matthew
Selva, Dinesh
Montgomery, Grant W.
Macgregor, Stuart
Craig, Jamie E.
Source :
BMC Genomics; 11/18/2016, Vol. 17, p1-10, 10p, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Graves' disease is an autoimmune thyroid disease of complex inheritance. Multiple genetic susceptibility loci are thought to be involved in Graves' disease and it is therefore likely that these can be identified by genome wide association studies. This study aimed to determine if a genome wide association study, using a pooling methodology, could detect genomic loci associated with Graves' disease. Results: Nineteen of the top ranking single nucleotide polymorphisms including HLA-DQA1 and C6orf10, were clustered within the Major Histo-compatibility Complex region on chromosome 6p21, with rs1613056 reaching genome wide significance (p = 5 × 10<superscript>-8</superscript>). Technical validation of top ranking non-Major Histo-compatablity complex single nucleotide polymorphisms with individual genotyping in the discovery cohort revealed four single nucleotide polymorphisms with p ≤ 10<superscript>-4</superscript>. Rs17676303 on chromosome 1q23.1, located upstream of FCRL3, showed evidence of association with Graves' disease across the discovery, replication and combined cohorts. A second single nucleotide polymorphism rs9644119 downstream of DPYSL2 showed some evidence of association supported by finding in the replication cohort that warrants further study. Conclusions: Pooled genome wide association study identified a genetic variant upstream of FCRL3 as a susceptibility locus for Graves' disease in addition to those identified in the Major Histo-compatibility Complex. A second locus downstream of DPYSL2 is potentially a novel genetic variant in Graves' disease that requires further confirmation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Volume :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119606374
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-3276-z