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Sex-specific analysis in Behçet's disease reveals higher genetic risk in male patients

Authors :
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (US)
Jo, Yun Gun
Ortiz-Fernández, Lourdes
Coit, Patrick
Yilmaz, Vuslat
Yentür, Sibel P.
Alibaz-Oner, Fatma
Aksu, Kenan
Erken, Eren
Düzgün, Nursen
Keser, Gokhan
Cefle, Ayse
Yazici, Ayten
Ergen, Andac
Alpsoy, Erkan
Salvarani, Carlo
Kısacık, Bünyamin
Kötter, Ina
Henes, Jörg
Çınar, Muhammet
Schaefer, Arne
Nohutcu, Rahime M.
Takeuchi, Fujio
Harihara, Shinji
Kaburaki, Toshikatsu
Messedi, Meriam
Song, Yeong-Wook
Kaşifoğlu, Timuçin
Martin, Javier
González-Escribano, María Francisca
Saruhan-Direskeneli, Güher
Direskeneli, Haner
Sawalha, Amr H.
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (US)
Jo, Yun Gun
Ortiz-Fernández, Lourdes
Coit, Patrick
Yilmaz, Vuslat
Yentür, Sibel P.
Alibaz-Oner, Fatma
Aksu, Kenan
Erken, Eren
Düzgün, Nursen
Keser, Gokhan
Cefle, Ayse
Yazici, Ayten
Ergen, Andac
Alpsoy, Erkan
Salvarani, Carlo
Kısacık, Bünyamin
Kötter, Ina
Henes, Jörg
Çınar, Muhammet
Schaefer, Arne
Nohutcu, Rahime M.
Takeuchi, Fujio
Harihara, Shinji
Kaburaki, Toshikatsu
Messedi, Meriam
Song, Yeong-Wook
Kaşifoğlu, Timuçin
Martin, Javier
González-Escribano, María Francisca
Saruhan-Direskeneli, Güher
Direskeneli, Haner
Sawalha, Amr H.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

[Objectives] Behçet's disease tends to be more severe in men than women. This study was undertaken to investigate sex-specific genetic effects in Behçet's disease.<br />[Methods] A total of 1762 male and 1216 female patients with Behçet's disease from six diverse populations were studied, with the majority of patients of Turkish origin. Genotyping was performed using an Infinium ImmunoArray-24 BeadChip, or extracted from available genotyping data. Following imputation and extensive quality control measures, genome-wide association analysis was performed comparing male to female patients in the Turkish cohort, followed by a meta-analysis of significant results in all six populations. In addition, a weighted genetic risk score for Behçet's disease was calculated and compared between male and female patients.<br />[Results] Genetic association analysis comparing male to female patients with Behçet's disease from Turkey revealed an association with male sex in HLA-B/MICA within the HLA region with a GWAS level of significance (rs2848712, OR = 1.46, P = 1.22 × 10−8). Meta-analysis of the effect in rs2848712 across six populations confirmed these results. Genetic risk score for Behçet's disease was significantly higher in male compared to female patients from Turkey. Higher genetic risk for Behçet's disease was observed in male patients in HLA-B/MICA (rs116799036, OR = 1.45, P = 1.95 × 10−8), HLA-C (rs12525170, OR = 1.46, P = 5.66 × 10−7), and KLRC4 (rs2617170, OR = 1.20, P = 0.019). In contrast, IFNGR1 (rs4896243, OR = 0.86, P = 0.011) was shown to confer higher genetic risk in female patients.<br />[Conclusions] Male patients with Behçet's disease are characterized by higher genetic risk compared to female patients. This genetic difference, primarily derived from our Turkish cohort, is largely explained by risk within the HLA region. These data suggest that genetic factors might contribute to differences in disease presentation between men and women with Behçet's disease.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380454848
Document Type :
Electronic Resource