An autoimmune pleiotropic SNP modulates IRF5 alternative promoter usage through ZBTB3-mediated chromatin looping.
Zhao WangQian LiangXinyi QianBolang HuZhanye ZhengJianhua WangYuelin HuZhengkai BaoKe ZhaoYao ZhouXiangling FengXianfu YiJin LiJiandang ShiZhe LiuJihui HaoKexin ChenYing YuPak-Chung ShamWange LuXiaoyan WangWeihong SongMulin Jun LiPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Genetic sharing is extensively observed for autoimmune diseases, but the causal variants and their underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. Through systematic investigation of autoimmune disease pleiotropic loci, we found most of these shared genetic effects are transmitted from regulatory code. We used an evidence-based strategy to functionally prioritize causal pleiotropic variants and identify their target genes. A top-ranked pleiotropic variant, rs4728142, yielded many lines of evidence as being causal. Mechanistically, the rs4728142-containing region interacts with the IRF5 alternative promoter in an allele-specific manner and orchestrates its upstream enhancer to regulate IRF5 alternative promoter usage through chromatin looping. A putative structural regulator, ZBTB3, mediates the allele-specific loop to promote IRF5-short transcript expression at the rs4728142 risk allele, resulting in IRF5 overactivation and M1 macrophage polarization. Together, our findings establish a causal mechanism between the regulatory variant and fine-scale molecular phenotype underlying the dysfunction of pleiotropic genes in human autoimmunity.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- copy number
- dendritic cells
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- multiple sclerosis
- endothelial cells
- poor prognosis
- binding protein
- oxidative stress
- air pollution
- healthcare
- multidrug resistant
- dna damage
- drug induced
- social media
- bioinformatics analysis
- immune response
- high density