Genome-wide association study identifies novel susceptibilities to adult moyamoya disease.
Jeon JP, Hong EP, Ha EJ et al.
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Abstract
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Genome-wide association study has limited to discover single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in several ethnicities. Here, we investigated an initial GWAS to identify genetic modifiers predicting with adult moyamoya disease (MMD) in Koreans. GWAS was performed in 216 patients with MMD and 296 controls using the large-scale Asian-specific Axiom Precision Medicine Research Array. A subsequent fine-mapping analysis was conducted to assess the causal variants associated with adult MMD. A total of 489,966 out of 802,688 SNPs were subjected to quality control analysis. Twenty-one SNPs reached a genome-wide significance threshold (p = 5 × 10-8) after pruning linkage disequilibrium (r2 < 0.8) and mis-clustered SNPs. Among these variants, the 17q25.3 region including TBC1D16, CCDC40, GAA, RNF213, and ENDOV genes was broadly associated with MMD (p = 3.1 × 10-20 to 4.2 × 10-8). Mutations in RNF213 including rs8082521 (Q1133K), rs10782008 (V1195M), rs9913636 (E1272Q), rs8074015 (D1331G), and rs9674961 (S2334N) showed a genome-wide significance (1.9 × 10-8 < p < 4.3 × 10-12) and were also replicated in the East-Asian populations. In subsequent analysis, RNF213 mutations were validated in a fine-mapping outcome (log10BF > 7). Most of the loci associated with MMD including 17q25.3 regions were detected with a statistical power greater than 80%. This study identifies several novel and known variations predicting adult MMD in Koreans. These findings may good biomarkers to evaluate MMD susceptibility and its clinical outcomes.
216 Korean ancestry cases, 296 Korean ancestry controls
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