4.4 Review Book Chapter

The Genetics of Crohn's Disease

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF GENOMICS AND HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 89-116

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-genom-082908-150013

Keywords

Crohn's disease; genetics; genome-wide association study

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [G0600329, G0800675] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Wellcome Trust [072789/Z/03/Z] Funding Source: Medline
  3. Department of Health [G0800675] Funding Source: Medline
  4. MRC [G0800675, G0600329] Funding Source: UKRI

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From epidemiological data, based on concordance data in family studies, via linkage analysis to genome-wide association studies, we and others have accumulated robust evidence implicating more than 30 distinct genomic loci involved in the genetic susceptibility to Crohn's disease (CD). These loci encode genes involved in a number of homeostatic rnechanisms: innate pattern recognition receptors (NOD2/Ct1RD 15, TLR4, CARD9), the differentiation of Th17-lymphocytes (IL-23R, JAK2, STAT3, CCR6, ICOSLG), autophagy (ATG16L1, IRGM, LRRK2), maintenance of epithelial barrier integrity (IBD5, DLG5, PTGER4, ITLN1, DMBT1, XBP1), and the orchestration of the secondary immune response (HLA-region, TNFSF15/TL1A, IRF5, PTPN2, PTPN22, NKX2-3, IL-12B, IL-18RAP MST1). While many of these loci also predispose to pediatric CD, an additional number of childhood-onset loci have been identified recently (e.g., TNFRSF6B). Not only has the identification of these loci improved our understanding of the pathophysiology of CD, this knowledge also holds real promise for clinical practice.

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