4.6 Article

Association of STAT4 Polymorphism with Severe Renal Insufficiency in Lupus Nephritis

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0084450

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council for Medicine
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  3. Swedish Rheumatism Foundation
  4. King Gustav V 80-year Foundation
  5. Ragnar Soderberg Foundation
  6. Combine
  7. County Council of Ostergotland
  8. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  9. Ingrid Asp Research Foundation
  10. Swedish Heart-Lung foundation
  11. Stockholm County Council
  12. Karolinska Institutet (ALF)
  13. Foundation in memory of Clas Groschinsky
  14. Swedish Society of Medicine

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Lupus nephritis is a cause of significant morbidity in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and its genetic background has not been completely clarified. The aim of this investigation was to analyze single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for association with lupus nephritis, its severe form proliferative nephritis and renal outcome, in two Swedish cohorts. Cohort I (n = 567 SLE cases, n = 512 controls) was previously genotyped for 5676 SNPs and cohort II (n = 145 SLE cases, n = 619 controls) was genotyped for SNPs in STAT4, IRF5, TNIP1 and BLK. Case-control and case-only association analyses for patients with lupus nephritis, proliferative nephritis and severe renal insufficiency were performed. In the case-control analysis of cohort I, four highly linked SNPs in STAT4 were associated with lupus nephritis with genome wide significance with p = 3.7x10(-9), OR 2.20 for the best SNP rs11889341. Strong signals of association between IRF5 and an HLA-DR3 SNP marker were also detected in the lupus nephritis case versus healthy control analysis (p<0.0001). An additional six genes showed an association with lupus nephritis with p<0.001 (PMS2, TNIP1, CARD11, ITGAM, BLK and IRAK1). In the case-only meta-analysis of the two cohorts, the STAT4 SNP rs7582694 was associated with severe renal insufficiency with p = 1.6x10(-3) and OR 2.22. We conclude that genetic variations in STAT4 predispose to lupus nephritis and a worse outcome with severe renal insufficiency.

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