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GWAS Study

Shared genetic origin of asthma, hay fever and eczema elucidates allergic disease biology.

Ferreira MA, Vonk JM, Baurecht H et al.

29083406 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
360838 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

FM
Ferreira MA
VJ
Vonk JM
BH
Baurecht H
MI
Marenholz I
TC
Tian C
HJ
Hoffman JD
HQ
Helmer Q
TA
Tillander A
UV
Ullemar V
VD
van Dongen J
LY
Lu Y
RF
Rüschendorf F
EJ
Esparza-Gordillo J
MC
Medway CW
ME
Mountjoy E
BK
Burrows K
HO
Hummel O
GS
Grosche S
BB
Brumpton BM
WJ
Witte JS
HJ
Hottenga JJ
WG
Willemsen G
ZJ
Zheng J
RE
Rodríguez E
HM
Hotze M
FA
Franke A
RJ
Revez JA
BJ
Beesley J
MM
Matheson MC
DS
Dharmage SC
BL
Bain LM
FL
Fritsche LG
GM
Gabrielsen ME
BB
Balliu B
NJ
Nielsen JB
ZW
Zhou W
HK
Hveem K
LA
Langhammer A
HO
Holmen OL
LM
Løset M
AG
Abecasis GR
WC
Willer CJ
AA
Arnold A
HG
Homuth G
SC
Schmidt CO
TP
Thompson PJ
MN
Martin NG
DD
Duffy DL
NN
Novak N
SH
Schulz H
KS
Karrasch S
GC
Gieger C
SK
Strauch K
MR
Melles RB
HD
Hinds DA
HN
Hübner N
WS
Weidinger S
MP
Magnusson PKE
JR
Jansen R
JE
Jorgenson E
LY
Lee YA
BD
Boomsma DI
AC
Almqvist C
KR
Karlsson R
KG
Koppelman GH
PL
Paternoster L
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Asthma, hay fever (or allergic rhinitis) and eczema (or atopic dermatitis) often coexist in the same individuals, partly because of a shared genetic origin. To identify shared risk variants, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS; n = 360,838) of a broad allergic disease phenotype that considers the presence of any one of these three diseases. We identified 136 independent risk variants (P < 3 × 10-8), including 73 not previously reported, which implicate 132 nearby genes in allergic disease pathophysiology. Disease-specific effects were detected for only six variants, confirming that most represent shared risk factors. Tissue-specific heritability and biological process enrichment analyses suggest that shared risk variants influence lymphocyte-mediated immunity. Six target genes provide an opportunity for drug repositioning, while for 36 genes CpG methylation was found to influence transcription independently of genetic effects. Asthma, hay fever and eczema partly coexist because they share many genetic risk variants that dysregulate the expression of immune-related genes.

180,129 European ancestry cases, 180,709 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

360838
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.S., Australia, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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