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Novel Crohn disease locus identified by genome-wide association maps to a gene desert on 5p13.1 and modulates expression of PTGER4.

Authors :
Cécile Libioulle
Edouard Louis
Sarah Hansoul
Cynthia Sandor
Frédéric Farnir
Denis Franchimont
Séverine Vermeire
Olivier Dewit
Martine de Vos
Anna Dixon
Bruno Demarche
Ivo Gut
Simon Heath
Mario Foglio
Liming Liang
Debby Laukens
Myriam Mni
Diana Zelenika
André Van Gossum
Paul Rutgeerts
Jacques Belaiche
Mark Lathrop
Michel Georges
Source :
PLoS Genetics, Vol 3, Iss 4, p e58 (2007)
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2007.

Abstract

To identify novel susceptibility loci for Crohn disease (CD), we undertook a genome-wide association study with more than 300,000 SNPs characterized in 547 patients and 928 controls. We found three chromosome regions that provided evidence of disease association with p-values between 10(-6) and 10(-9). Two of these (IL23R on Chromosome 1 and CARD15 on Chromosome 16) correspond to genes previously reported to be associated with CD. In addition, a 250-kb region of Chromosome 5p13.1 was found to contain multiple markers with strongly suggestive evidence of disease association (including four markers with p < 10(-7)). We replicated the results for 5p13.1 by studying 1,266 additional CD patients, 559 additional controls, and 428 trios. Significant evidence of association (p < 4 x 10(-4)) was found in case/control comparisons with the replication data, while associated alleles were over-transmitted to affected offspring (p < 0.05), thus confirming that the 5p13.1 locus contributes to CD susceptibility. The CD-associated 250-kb region was saturated with 111 SNP markers. Haplotype analysis supports a complex locus architecture with multiple variants contributing to disease susceptibility. The novel 5p13.1 CD locus is contained within a 1.25-Mb gene desert. We present evidence that disease-associated alleles correlate with quantitative expression levels of the prostaglandin receptor EP4, PTGER4, the gene that resides closest to the associated region. Our results identify a major new susceptibility locus for CD, and suggest that genetic variants associated with disease risk at this locus could modulate cis-acting regulatory elements of PTGER4.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics
QH426-470

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537390 and 15537404
Volume :
3
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.14badae124fb4fb19fb28982d2905bee
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030058