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Genetic analysis of four consanguineous multiplex families with inflammatory bowel disease

Authors :
Saleh Daher
Matthew Frampton
Elena R. Schiff
Anthony W. Segal
Eran Israeli
Noam Ben-Yosef
Adam P. Levine
Fadi Abu Baker
Rifaat Safadi
Source :
Gastroenterology Report
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background Family studies support a genetic predisposition to inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), but known genetic variants only partially explain the disease heritability. Families with multiple affected individuals potentially harbour rare and high-impact causal variants. Long regions of homozygosity due to recent inbreeding may increase the risk of individuals bearing homozygous loss-of-function variants. This study aimed to identify rare and homozygous genetic variants contributing to IBD. Methods Four families with known consanguinity and multiple cases of IBD were recruited. In a family-specific analysis, we utilised homozygosity mapping complemented by whole-exome sequencing. Results We detected a single region of homozygosity shared by Crohn's disease cases from a family of Druze ancestry, spanning 2.6 Mb containing the NOD2 gene. Whole-exome sequencing did not identify any potentially damaging variants within the region, suggesting that non-coding variation may be involved. In addition, affected individuals in the families harboured several rare and potentially damaging homozygous variants in genes with a role in autophagy and innate immunity including LRRK1, WHAMM, DENND3, and C5. Conclusion This study examined the potential contribution of rare, high-impact homozygous variants in consanguineous families with IBD. While the analysis was not designed to achieve statistical significance, our findings highlight genes or loci that warrant further research. Non-coding variants affecting NOD2 may be of importance in Druze patients with Crohn's disease.

Details

ISSN :
20520034
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology Report
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b31dd0734ffe78cd1de2bca9085e3378
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/gastro/goab007