Brief report: IRF4 newly identified as a common susceptibility locus for systemic sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis in a cross-disease meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies
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López Isac, ElenaEditorial
Wiley
Date
2016Referencia bibliográfica
López-Isac E, Martín JE, Assassi S, Simeón CP, Carreira P, Ortego-Centeno N, Freire M, Beltrán E, Narváez J, Alegre-Sancho JJ; Spanish Scleroderma Group; Fernández-Gutiérrez B, Balsa A, Ortiz AM, González-Gay MA, Beretta L, Santaniello A, Bellocchi C, Lunardi C, Moroncini G, Gabrielli A, Witte T, Hunzelmann N, Distler JH, Riekemasten G, van der Helm-van Mil AH, de Vries-Bouwstra J, Magro-Checa C, Voskuyl AE, Vonk MC, Molberg Ø, Merriman T, Hesselstrand R, Nordin A, Padyukov L, Herrick A, Eyre S, Koeleman BP, Denton CP, Fonseca C, Radstake TR, Worthington J, Mayes MD, Martín J. Brief Report: IRF4 Newly Identified as a Common Susceptibility Locus for Systemic Sclerosis and Rheumatoid Arthritis in a Cross-Disease Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2016 Sep;68(9):2338-44. doi: 10.1002/art.39730. PMID: 27111665; PMCID: PMC5530728.
Sponsorship
This work was supported by the following grants: JM was funded by SAF2012-34435 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, the EU/EFPIA Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking PRECISESADS (ref: 115565) and BIO-1395 from Junta de Andalucía. NO was funded by PI-0590-2010, from Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social, Junta de Andalucía, Spain. ELI was supported by Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte through the program FPU. TRDJR was funded by the VIDI laureate from the Dutch Association of Research (NWO) and Dutch Arthritis Foundation (National Reumafonds). Study on USA samples were supported by the Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) Centers of Research Translation (CORT) grant P50AR054144 (MDM), the NIH-NIAMS SSc Family Registry and DNA Repository (N01-AR-0-2251) (MDM), NIH-KL2RR024149-04 (SA), NIH-NCRR 3UL1RR024148, US NIH NIAID UO1 1U01AI09090, K23AR061436 (SA), Department of Defense PR1206877 (MDM) and NIH/NIAMS-RO1- AR055258 (MDM).Abstract
Objective: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are autoimmune diseases that have similar clinical and immunologic characteristics. To date, several shared SSc-RA genetic loci have been identified independently. The aim of the current study was to systematically search for new common SSc-RA loci through an interdisease meta-genome-wide association (meta-GWAS) strategy.
Methods: The study was designed as a meta-analysis combining GWAS data sets of patients with SSc and patients with RA, using a strategy that allowed identification of loci with both same-direction and opposite-direction allelic effects. The top single-nucleotide polymorphisms were followed up in independent SSc and RA case-control cohorts. This allowed an increase in the sample size to a total of 8,830 patients with SSc, 16,870 patients with RA, and 43,393 healthy controls.
Results: This cross-disease meta-analysis of the GWAS data sets identified several loci with nominal association signals (P < 5 × 10(-6) ) that also showed evidence of association in the disease-specific GWAS scans. These loci included several genomic regions not previously reported as shared loci, as well as several risk factors that were previously found to be associated with both diseases. Follow-up analyses of the putatively new SSc-RA loci identified IRF4 as a shared risk factor for these 2 diseases (Pcombined = 3.29 × 10(-12) ). Analysis of the biologic relevance of the known SSc-RA shared loci identified the type I interferon and interleukin-12 signaling pathways as the main common etiologic factors.
Conclusion: This study identified a novel shared locus, IRF4, for the risk of SSc and RA, and highlighted the usefulness of a cross-disease GWAS meta-analysis strategy in the identification of common risk loci.