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Extended haplotype association study in Crohn’s disease identifies a novel, Ashkenazi Jewish-specific missense mutation in the NF-κB pathway gene, HEATR3

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Author(s)
Zhang, Wei
Hui, Ken Y.
Gusev, Alexander
Warner, Neil
Evelyn Ng, Sok Meng
Ferguson, John
Choi, Murim
Burberry, Aaron
Abraham, Clara
Mayer, Lloyd
Desnick, Robert J.
Cardinale, Christopher J.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Waterman, Matti
Chowers, Yehuda
Karban, Amir
Brant, Steven R.
Silverberg, Mark S.
Gregersen, Peter K.
Katz, Seymour
Lifton, Richard P.
Zhao, Hongyu
Nuñez, Gabriel
Pe’er, Itsik
Peter, Inga
Cho, Judy H.
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/1118509
Online Access
https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gene.2013.19
Abstract
The Ashkenazi Jewish population has a several-fold higher prevalence of Crohn’s disease compared to non-Jewish European ancestry populations and has a unique genetic history. Haplotype association is critical to Crohn’s disease etiology in this population, most notably at NOD2, in which three causal, uncommon, and conditionally independent NOD2 variants reside on a shared background haplotype. We present an analysis of extended haplotypes which showed significantly greater association to Crohn’s disease in the Ashkenazi Jewish population compared to a non-Jewish population (145 haplotypes and no haplotypes with P-value < 10−3, respectively). Two haplotype regions, one each on chromosomes 16 and 21, conferred increased disease risk within established Crohn’s disease loci. We performed exome sequencing of 55 Ashkenazi Jewish individuals and follow-up genotyping focused on variants in these two regions. We observed Ashkenazi Jewish-specific nominal association at R755C in TRPM2 on chromosome 21. Within the chromosome 16 region, R642S of HEATR3 and rs9922362 of BRD7 showed genome-wide significance. Expression studies of HEATR3 demonstrated a positive role in NOD2-mediated NF-κB signaling. The BRD7 signal showed conditional dependence with only the downstream rare Crohn’s disease-causal variants in NOD2, but not with the background haplotype; this elaborates NOD2 as a key illustration of synthetic association.
Date
2013-04-25
Type
Text
Identifier
oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:3785105
/pmc/articles/PMC3785105/
/pubmed/23615072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gene.2013.19
Copyright/License
Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
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