Prioritization of autoimmune disease-associated genetic variants that perturb regulatory element activity in T cells.
Kousuke MouriMichael H GuoCarl G de BoerMichelle M LissnerIngrid A HartenGregory A NewbyHannah A DeBergWinona F PlattMatteo GentiliDavid R LiuDaniel J CampbellNir HacohenRyan TewheyJohn P RayPublished in: Nature genetics (2022)
Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have uncovered hundreds of autoimmune disease-associated loci; however, the causal genetic variants within each locus are mostly unknown. Here, we perform high-throughput allele-specific reporter assays to prioritize disease-associated variants for five autoimmune diseases. By examining variants that both promote allele-specific reporter expression and are located in accessible chromatin, we identify 60 putatively causal variants that enrich for statistically fine-mapped variants by up to 57.8-fold. We introduced the risk allele of a prioritized variant (rs72928038) into a human T cell line and deleted the orthologous sequence in mice, both resulting in reduced BACH2 expression. Naive CD8 T cells from mice containing the deletion had reduced expression of genes that suppress activation and maintain stemness and, upon acute viral infection, displayed greater propensity to become effector T cells. Our results represent an example of an effective approach for prioritizing variants and studying their physiologically relevant effects.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- poor prognosis
- high throughput
- genome wide
- genome wide association
- endothelial cells
- multiple sclerosis
- transcription factor
- crispr cas
- gene expression
- binding protein
- stem cells
- drug induced
- high fat diet induced
- liver failure
- dna methylation
- regulatory t cells
- hiv infected
- immune response
- respiratory failure
- hepatitis b virus
- wild type
- aortic dissection