Genome-wide association studies of autoimmune vitiligo identify 23 new risk loci and highlight key pathways and regulatory variants.
Ying JinGenevieve AndersenDaniel YorgovTracey M FerraraSongtao BenKelly M BrownsonPaulene J HollandStanca A BirleaJanet SiebertAnke HartmannAnne LienertNanja van GeelJo LambertRosalie M LuitenAlbert WolkerstorferJ P Wietze van der VeenDorothy C BennettAlain TaïebKhaled EzzedineE Helen KempDavid J GawkrodgerAnthony P WeetmanSulev KõksEle PransKülli KingoMaire KarelsonMargaret R WallaceWayne T McCormackAndreas OverbeckSilvia MorettiRoberta ColucciMauro PicardoNanette B SilverbergMats OlssonYan ValleIgor KorobkoMarkus BöhmHenry W LimIltefat HamzaviLi ZhouQing-Sheng MiPamela R FainStephanie A SantoricoRichard A SpritzPublished in: Nature genetics (2016)
Vitiligo is an autoimmune disease in which depigmented skin results from the destruction of melanocytes, with epidemiological association with other autoimmune diseases. In previous linkage and genome-wide association studies (GWAS1 and GWAS2), we identified 27 vitiligo susceptibility loci in patients of European ancestry. We carried out a third GWAS (GWAS3) in European-ancestry subjects, with augmented GWAS1 and GWAS2 controls, genome-wide imputation, and meta-analysis of all three GWAS, followed by an independent replication. The combined analyses, with 4,680 cases and 39,586 controls, identified 23 new significantly associated loci and 7 suggestive loci. Most encode immune and apoptotic regulators, with some also associated with other autoimmune diseases, as well as several melanocyte regulators. Bioinformatic analyses indicate a predominance of causal regulatory variation, some of which corresponds to expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) at these loci. Together, the identified genes provide a framework for the genetic architecture and pathobiology of vitiligo, highlight relationships with other autoimmune diseases and melanoma, and offer potential targets for treatment.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- genome wide association
- genome wide association study
- dna methylation
- copy number
- transcription factor
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