Transcription factors operate across disease loci, with EBNA2 implicated in autoimmunity.
John B HarleyXiaoting ChenMario PujatoDaniel MillerAvery MaddoxCarmy ForneyAlbert F MagnusenArthur LynchKashish ChetalMasashi YukawaArtem BarskiNathan SalomonisKenneth M KaufmanLeah C KottyanMatthew T WeirauchPublished in: Nature genetics (2018)
Explaining the genetics of many diseases is challenging because most associations localize to incompletely characterized regulatory regions. Using new computational methods, we show that transcription factors (TFs) occupy multiple loci associated with individual complex genetic disorders. Application to 213 phenotypes and 1,544 TF binding datasets identified 2,264 relationships between hundreds of TFs and 94 phenotypes, including androgen receptor in prostate cancer and GATA3 in breast cancer. Strikingly, nearly half of systemic lupus erythematosus risk loci are occupied by the Epstein-Barr virus EBNA2 protein and many coclustering human TFs, showing gene-environment interaction. Similar EBNA2-anchored associations exist in multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, type 1 diabetes, juvenile idiopathic arthritis and celiac disease. Instances of allele-dependent DNA binding and downstream effects on gene expression at plausibly causal variants support genetic mechanisms dependent on EBNA2. Our results nominate mechanisms that operate across risk loci within disease phenotypes, suggesting new models for disease origins.
Keyphrases
- epstein barr virus
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- dna binding
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- prostate cancer
- dna methylation
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- copy number
- juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- gene expression
- celiac disease
- rheumatoid arthritis
- multiple sclerosis
- disease activity
- type diabetes
- genome wide association study
- genome wide association
- endothelial cells
- genome wide identification
- cardiovascular disease
- binding protein
- metabolic syndrome
- single cell
- glycemic control
- ankylosing spondylitis
- rna seq
- skeletal muscle
- protein protein