4.8 Article

Widespread non-additive and interaction effects within HLA loci modulate the risk of autoimmune diseases

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 47, Issue 9, Pages 1085-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3379

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [LE 2593/1-1, LE 2593/2-1, GO 1795/1-1, KN 378/2-1, SCHU 1596/5-1]
  2. US National Institutes of Health [1R01AR062886, R01AR065183, 1R01AR063759-01A1, 5U01GM092691, 1UH2AR067677-01]
  3. IMI (European Union)
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Vernieuwingsimpuls VIDI Award NWO project) [016.126.354]
  5. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [RD12/0009]
  6. Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach-Stiftung
  7. Medical Research Council [G1001158] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. MRC [G1001158] Funding Source: UKRI
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H05670, 15H05911] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes confer substantial risk for autoimmune diseases on a log-additive scale. Here we speculated that differences in autoantigen-binding repertoires between a heterozygote's two expressed HLA variants might result in additional non-additive risk effects. We tested the non-additive disease contributions of classical HLA alleles in patients and matched controls for five common autoimmune diseases: rheumatoid arthritis (n(cases) = 5,337), type 1 diabetes (T1D; n(cases) = 5,567), psoriasis vulgaris (n(cases) = 3,089), idiopathic achalasia (n(cases) = 727) and celiac disease (ncases = 11,115). In four of the five diseases, we observed highly significant, non-additive dominance effects (rheumatoid arthritis, P = 2.5 x 10(-12); T1D, P = 2.4 x 10(-10); psoriasis, P = 5.9 x 10(-6); celiac disease, P = 1.2 x 10(-87)). In three of these diseases, the non-additive dominance effects were explained by interactions between specific classical HLA alleles (rheumatoid arthritis, P = 1.8 x 10(-3); T1D, P = 8.6 x 10(-27); celiac disease, P = 6.0 x 10(-100)). These interactions generally increased disease risk and explained moderate but significant fractions of phenotypic variance (rheumatoid arthritis, 1.4%; T1D, 4.0%; celiac disease, 4.1%) beyond a simple additive model.

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