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An ImmunoChip study of multiple sclerosis risk in African Americans

Authors :
Takuya Matsushita
Jeffrey A. Cohen
Noriko Isobe
Joseph Herbert
Bruce A.C. Cree
Jacob L. McCauley
Stephen S. Rich
Stephen L. Hauser
Stacy J. Caillier
Jayaji M. Moré
Laura Piccio
Ashley Beecham
Omar Khan
Jorge R. Oksenberg
Stephen Sawcer
Pouya Khankhanian
Lael Stone
Lohith Madireddy
Suna Onengut-Gumuscu
Adam Santaniello
Pierre-Antoine Gourraud
Source :
Brain. 138:1518-1530
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2015.

Abstract

The aims of this study were: (i) to determine to what degree multiple sclerosis-associated loci discovered in European populations also influence susceptibility in African Americans; (ii) to assess the extent to which the unique linkage disequilibrium patterns in African Americans can contribute to localizing the functionally relevant regions or genes; and (iii) to search for novel African American multiple sclerosis-associated loci. Using the ImmunoChip custom array we genotyped 803 African American cases with multiple sclerosis and 1516 African American control subjects at 130 135 autosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms. We conducted association analysis with rigorous adjustments for population stratification and admixture. Of the 110 non-major histocompatibility complex multiple sclerosis-associated variants identified in Europeans, 96 passed stringent quality control in our African American data set and of these, >70% (69) showed over-representation of the same allele amongst cases, including 21 with nominally significant evidence for association (one-tailed test P < 0.05). At a further eight loci we found nominally significant association with an alternate correlated risk-tagging single nucleotide polymorphism from the same region. Outside the regions known to be associated in Europeans, we found seven potentially associated novel candidate multiple sclerosis variants (P < 10(-4)), one of which (rs2702180) also showed nominally significant evidence for association (one-tailed test P = 0.034) in an independent second cohort of 620 African American cases and 1565 control subjects. However, none of these novel associations reached genome-wide significance (combined P = 6.3 × 10(-5)). Our data demonstrate substantial overlap between African American and European multiple sclerosis variants, indicating common genetic contributions to multiple sclerosis risk.

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Volume :
138
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fd8454365b550a546e94dfdbd3e894b