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GWAS Study

Identification of shared loci associated with both Crohn's disease and leprosy in east Asians.

Jung S, Park D, Lee HS et al.

35512355 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
7266 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JS
Jung S
PD
Park D
LH
Lee HS
KY
Kim Y
BJ
Baek J
HS
Hwang SW
PS
Park SH
YS
Yang SK
YB
Ye BD
HB
Han B
SY
Sun Y
LH
Liu H
ZF
Zhang F
LJ
Liu J
SK
Song K
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of Crohn's disease (CD) in European and leprosy in Chinese population have shown that CD and leprosy share genetic risk loci. As these shared loci were identified through cross-comparisons across different ethnic populations, we hypothesized that meta-analysis of GWAS on CD and leprosy in East Asian populations would increase power to identify additional shared loci. We performed a cross-disease meta-analysis of GWAS data from CD (1621 cases and 4419 controls) and leprosy (2901 cases 3801 controls) followed by replication in additional datasets comprising 738 CD cases and 488 controls and 842 leprosy cases and 925 controls. We identified one novel locus at 7p22.3, rs77992257 in intron 2 of ADAP1, shared between CD and leprosy with genome-wide significance (P = 3.80 × 10-11) and confirmed 10 previously established loci in both diseases: IL23R, IL18RAP, IL12B, RIPK2, TNFSF15, ZNF365-EGR2, CCDC88B, LACC1, IL27, NOD2. Phenotype variance explained by the polygenic risk scores derived from Chinese leprosy data explained up to 5.28% of variance of Korean CD, supporting similar genetic structures between the two diseases. Although CD and leprosy shared a substantial number of genetic susceptibility loci in East Asians, the majority of shared susceptibility loci showed allelic effects in the opposite direction. Investigation of the genetic correlation using cross-trait linkage disequilibrium score regression also showed a negative genetic correlation between CD and leprosy (rg [SE] = -0.40[0.13], P = 2.6 × 10-3). These observations implicate the possibility that CD might be caused by hyper-sensitive reactions toward pathogenic stimuli.

1,621 Korean ancestry cases, 4,419 Korean ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

7266
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
738 Korean ancestry cases, 488 Korean ancestry controls
Replication Participants
East Asian
Ancestry
Republic of Korea, China
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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