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Trans-ancestral studies fine map the SLE-susceptibility locus TNFSF4.


ABSTRACT: We previously established an 80 kb haplotype upstream of TNFSF4 as a susceptibility locus in the autoimmune disease SLE. SLE-associated alleles at this locus are associated with inflammatory disorders, including atherosclerosis and ischaemic stroke. In Europeans, the TNFSF4 causal variants have remained elusive due to strong linkage disequilibrium exhibited by alleles spanning the region. Using a trans-ancestral approach to fine-map the locus, utilising 17,900 SLE and control subjects including Amerindian/Hispanics (1348 cases, 717 controls), African-Americans (AA) (1529, 2048) and better powered cohorts of Europeans and East Asians, we find strong association of risk alleles in all ethnicities; the AA association replicates in African-American Gullah (152,122). The best evidence of association comes from two adjacent markers: rs2205960-T (P=1.71 × 10(-34) , OR=1.43[1.26-1.60]) and rs1234317-T (P=1.16 × 10(-28) , OR=1.38[1.24-1.54]). Inference of fine-scale recombination rates for all populations tested finds the 80 kb risk and non-risk haplotypes in all except African-Americans. In this population the decay of recombination equates to an 11 kb risk haplotype, anchored in the 5' region proximal to TNFSF4 and tagged by rs2205960-T after 1000 Genomes phase 1 (v3) imputation. Conditional regression analyses delineate the 5' risk signal to rs2205960-T and the independent non-risk signal to rs1234314-C. Our case-only and SLE-control cohorts demonstrate robust association of rs2205960-T with autoantibody production. The rs2205960-T is predicted to form part of a decameric motif which binds NF-?Bp65 with increased affinity compared to rs2205960-G. ChIP-seq data also indicate NF-?B interaction with the DNA sequence at this position in LCL cells. Our research suggests association of rs2205960-T with SLE across multiple groups and an independent non-risk signal at rs1234314-C. rs2205960-T is associated with autoantibody production and lymphopenia. Our data confirm a global signal at TNFSF4 and a role for the expressed product at multiple stages of lymphocyte dysregulation during SLE pathogenesis. We confirm the validity of trans-ancestral mapping in a complex trait.

SUBMITTER: Manku H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3715547 | biostudies-literature | 2013

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Trans-ancestral studies fine map the SLE-susceptibility locus TNFSF4.

Manku Harinder H   Langefeld Carl D CD   Guerra Sandra G SG   Malik Talat H TH   Alarcon-Riquelme Marta M   Anaya Juan-Manuel JM   Bae Sang-Cheol SC   Boackle Susan A SA   Brown Elizabeth E EE   Criswell Lindsey A LA   Freedman Barry I BI   Gaffney Patrick M PM   Gregersen Peter A PA   Guthridge Joel M JM   Han Sang-Hoon SH   Harley John B JB   Jacob Chaim O CO   James Judith A JA   Kamen Diane L DL   Kaufman Kenneth M KM   Kelly Jennifer A JA   Martin Javier J   Merrill Joan T JT   Moser Kathy L KL   Niewold Timothy B TB   Park So-Yeon SY   Pons-Estel Bernardo A BA   Sawalha Amr H AH   Scofield R Hal RH   Shen Nan N   Stevens Anne M AM   Sun Celi C   Gilkeson Gary S GS   Edberg Jeff C JC   Kimberly Robert P RP   Nath Swapan K SK   Tsao Betty P BP   Vyse Tim J TJ  

PLoS genetics 20130718 7


We previously established an 80 kb haplotype upstream of TNFSF4 as a susceptibility locus in the autoimmune disease SLE. SLE-associated alleles at this locus are associated with inflammatory disorders, including atherosclerosis and ischaemic stroke. In Europeans, the TNFSF4 causal variants have remained elusive due to strong linkage disequilibrium exhibited by alleles spanning the region. Using a trans-ancestral approach to fine-map the locus, utilising 17,900 SLE and control subjects including  ...[more]

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