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GWAS Study

Gene-level association analysis of systemic sclerosis: A comparison of African-Americans and White populations.

Gorlova OY, Li Y, Gorlov I et al.

29293537 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
5850 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GO
Gorlova OY
LY
Li Y
GI
Gorlov I
YJ
Ying J
CW
Chen WV
AS
Assassi S
RJ
Reveille JD
AF
Arnett FC
ZX
Zhou X
BL
Bossini-Castillo L
LE
Lopez-Isac E
AM
Acosta-Herrera M
GP
Gregersen PK
LA
Lee AT
SV
Steen VD
FB
Fessler BJ
KD
Khanna D
SE
Schiopu E
SR
Silver RM
MJ
Molitor JA
FD
Furst DE
KS
Kafaja S
SR
Simms RW
LR
Lafyatis RA
CP
Carreira P
SC
Simeon CP
CI
Castellvi I
BE
Beltran E
ON
Ortego N
AC
Amos CI
MJ
Martin J
MM
Mayes MD
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Gene-level analysis of ImmunoChip or genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data has not been previously reported for systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma). The objective of this study was to analyze genetic susceptibility loci in SSc at the gene level and to determine if the detected associations were shared in African-American and White populations, using data from ImmunoChip and GWAS genotyping studies. The White sample included 1833 cases and 3466 controls (956 cases and 2741 controls from the US and 877 cases and 725 controls from Spain) and the African American sample, 291 cases and 260 controls. In both Whites and African Americans, we performed a gene-level analysis that integrates association statistics in a gene possibly harboring multiple SNPs with weak effect on disease risk, using Versatile Gene-based Association Study (VEGAS) software. The SNP-level analysis was performed using PLINK v.1.07. We identified 4 novel candidate genes (STAT1, FCGR2C, NIPSNAP3B, and SCT) significantly associated and 4 genes (SERBP1, PINX1, TMEM175 and EXOC2) suggestively associated with SSc in the gene level analysis in White patients. As an exploratory analysis we compared the results on Whites with those from African Americans. Of previously established susceptibility genes identified in Whites, only TNFAIP3 was significant at the nominal level (p = 6.13x10-3) in African Americans in the gene-level analysis of the ImmunoChip data. Among the top suggestive novel genes identified in Whites based on the ImmunoChip data, FCGR2C and PINX1 were only nominally significant in African Americans (p = 0.016 and p = 0.028, respectively), while among the top novel genes identified in the gene-level analysis in African Americans, UNC5C (p = 5.57x10-4) and CLEC16A (p = 0.0463) were also nominally significant in Whites. We also present the gene-level analysis of SSc clinical and autoantibody phenotypes among Whites. Our findings need to be validated by independent studies, particularly due to the limited sample size of African Americans.

1,833 European ancestry cases, 3,466 European ancestry controls, 291 African American cases, 260 African American controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

5850
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African American or Afro-Caribbean, European
Ancestry
U.S., Spain
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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