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GWAS Study

Whole-genome sequencing of African Americans implicates differential genetic architecture in inflammatory bowel disease.

Somineni HK, Nagpal S, Venkateswaran S et al.

33600772 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
3418 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SH
Somineni HK
NS
Nagpal S
VS
Venkateswaran S
CD
Cutler DJ
OD
Okou DT
HT
Haritunians T
SC
Simpson CL
BF
Begum F
DL
Datta LW
QA
Quiros AJ
SJ
Seminerio J
ME
Mengesha E
AJ
Alexander JS
BR
Baldassano RN
DS
Dudley-Brown S
CR
Cross RK
DT
Dassopoulos T
DL
Denson LA
DT
Dhere TA
IH
Iskandar H
DG
Dryden GW
HJ
Hou JK
HS
Hussain SZ
HJ
Hyams JS
IK
Isaacs KL
KH
Kader H
KM
Kappelman MD
KJ
Katz J
KR
Kellermayer R
KJ
Kuemmerle JF
LM
Lazarev M
LE
Li E
MP
Mannon P
MD
Moulton DE
NR
Newberry RD
PA
Patel AS
PJ
Pekow J
SS
Saeed SA
VJ
Valentine JF
WM
Wang MH
MJ
McCauley JL
AM
Abreu MT
JT
Jester T
MZ
Molle-Rios Z
PS
Palle S
SE
Scherl EJ
KJ
Kwon J
RJ
Rioux JD
DR
Duerr RH
SM
Silverberg MS
ZM
Zwick ME
SC
Stevens C
DM
Daly MJ
CJ
Cho JH
GG
Gibson G
MD
McGovern DPB
BS
Brant SR
KS
Kugathasan S
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Whether or not populations diverge with respect to the genetic contribution to risk of specific complex diseases is relevant to understanding the evolution of susceptibility and origins of health disparities. Here, we describe a large-scale whole-genome sequencing study of inflammatory bowel disease encompassing 1,774 affected individuals and 1,644 healthy control Americans with African ancestry (African Americans). Although no new loci for inflammatory bowel disease are discovered at genome-wide significance levels, we identify numerous instances of differential effect sizes in combination with divergent allele frequencies. For example, the major effect at PTGER4 fine maps to a single credible interval of 22 SNPs corresponding to one of four independent associations at the locus in European ancestry individuals but with an elevated odds ratio for Crohn disease in African Americans. A rare variant aggregate analysis implicates Ca2+-binding neuro-immunomodulator CALB2 in ulcerative colitis. Highly significant overall overlap of common variant risk for inflammatory bowel disease susceptibility between individuals with African and European ancestries was observed, with 41 of 241 previously known lead variants replicated and overall correlations in effect sizes of 0.68 for combined inflammatory bowel disease. Nevertheless, subtle differences influence the performance of polygenic risk scores, and we show that ancestry-appropriate weights significantly improve polygenic prediction in the highest percentiles of risk. The median amount of variance explained per locus remains the same in African and European cohorts, providing evidence for compensation of effect sizes as allele frequencies diverge, as expected under a highly polygenic model of disease.

1,774 African American cases, 1,644 African American controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

3418
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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