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GWAS Study

Sequence variant affects GCSAML splicing, mast cell specific proteins, and risk of urticaria.

Kristjansson RP, Oskarsson GR, Skuladottir A et al.

37430141 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1270695 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

KR
Kristjansson RP
OG
Oskarsson GR
SA
Skuladottir A
OA
Oddsson A
RS
Rognvaldsson S
SG
Sveinbjornsson G
LS
Lund SH
JB
Jensson BO
SE
Styrmisdottir EL
HG
Halldorsson GH
FE
Ferkingstad E
EG
Eldjarn GH
BD
Beyter D
KS
Kristmundsdottir S
JK
Juliusson K
FR
Fridriksdottir R
AG
Arnadottir GA
KH
Katrinardottir H
SM
Snorradottir MH
TV
Tragante V
SL
Stefansdottir L
IE
Ivarsdottir EV
BG
Bjornsdottir G
HB
Halldorsson BV
TG
Thorleifsson G
LB
Ludviksson BR
OP
Onundarson PT
SS
Saevarsdottir S
MP
Melsted P
NG
Norddahl GL
BU
Bjornsdottir US
OT
Olafsdottir T
GD
Gudbjartsson DF
TU
Thorsteinsdottir U
JI
Jonsdottir I
SP
Sulem P
SK
Stefansson K
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Urticaria is a skin disorder characterized by outbreaks of raised pruritic wheals. In order to identify sequence variants associated with urticaria, we performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for urticaria with a total of 40,694 cases and 1,230,001 controls from Iceland, the UK, Finland, and Japan. We also performed transcriptome- and proteome-wide analyses in Iceland and the UK. We found nine sequence variants at nine loci associating with urticaria. The variants are at genes participating in type 2 immune responses and/or mast cell biology (CBLB, FCER1A, GCSAML, STAT6, TPSD1, ZFPM1), the innate immunity (C4), and NF-κB signaling. The most significant association was observed for the splice-donor variant rs56043070[A] (hg38: chr1:247556467) in GCSAML (MAF = 6.6%, OR = 1.24 (95%CI: 1.20-1.28), P-value = 3.6 × 10-44). We assessed the effects of the variants on transcripts, and levels of proteins relevant to urticaria pathophysiology. Our results emphasize the role of type 2 immune response and mast cell activation in the pathogenesis of urticaria. Our findings may point to an IgE-independent urticaria pathway that could help address unmet clinical need.

9,893 East Asian ancestry cases, 162,190 East Asian ancestry controls, 30,801 European ancestry cases, 1,067,811 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1270695
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian, European
Ancestry
Japan, Finland, U.K., Iceland
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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