4.5 Article

Genome-Wide Association Analysis Reveals Genetic Heterogeneity of Sjogren's Syndrome According to Ancestry

Journal

ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 69, Issue 6, Pages 1294-1305

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/art.40040

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Funding

  1. National Eye Institute [N01-EY-[NEI AREDS]]
  2. Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR) [1 X01 HG005274-01]
  3. National Institutes of Health [HHSN268 200782096C]
  4. Gene Environment Association Studies Coordinating Center [U01HG004 446]
  5. Collaborative Study of Nicotine Dependence [P01-CA089392]
  6. University of Wisconsin Transdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Center [P50-DA019706, P50-A084724]
  7. NIDDK

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ObjectiveThe Sjogren's International Collaborative Clinical Alliance (SICCA) is an international data registry and biorepository derived from a multisite observational study of participants in whom genotyping was performed on the Omni2.5M platform and who had undergone deep phenotyping using common protocol-directed methods. The aim of this study was to examine the genetic etiology of Sjogren's syndrome (SS) across ancestry and disease subsets. MethodsWe performed genome-wide association study analyses using SICCA subjects and external controls obtained from dbGaP data sets, one using all participants (1,405 cases, 1,622 SICCA controls, and 3,125 external controls), one using European participants (585, 966, and 580, respectively), and one using Asian participants (460, 224, and 901, respectively) with ancestry adjustments via principal components analyses. We also investigated whether subphenotype distributions differ by ethnicity, and whether this contributes to the heterogeneity of genetic associations. ResultsWe observed significant associations in established regions of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), IRF5, and STAT4 (P=3 x 10(-42), P=3 x 10(-14), and P=9 x 10(-10), respectively), and several novel suggestive regions (those with 2 or more associations at P<1 x 10(-5)). Two regions have been previously implicated in autoimmune disease: KLRG1 (P=6 x 10(-7) [Asian cluster]) and SH2D2A (P=2 x 10(-6) [all participants]). We observed striking differences between the associations in Europeans and Asians, with high heterogeneity especially in the MHC; representative single-nucleotide polymorphisms from established and suggestive regions had highly significant differences in the allele frequencies in the study populations. We showed that SSA/SSB autoantibody production and the labial salivary gland focus score criteria were associated with the first worldwide principal component, indicative of higher non-European ancestry (P=4 x 10(-15) and P=4 x 10(-5), respectively), but that subphenotype differences did not explain most of the ancestry differences in genetic associations. ConclusionGenetic associations with SS differ markedly according to ancestry; however, this is not explained by differences in subphenotypes.

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