Novel Crohn Disease Locus Identified by Genome-Wide Association Maps to a Gene Desert on 5p13.1 and Modulates Expression of PTGER4
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 20 April 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Genetics
- Vol. 3 (4) , e58
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0030058
Abstract
To identify novel susceptibility loci for Crohn disease (CD), we undertook a genome-wide association study with more than 300,000 SNPs characterized in 547 patients and 928 controls. We found three chromosome regions that provided evidence of disease association with p-values between 10−6 and 10−9. Two of these (IL23R on Chromosome 1 and CARD15 on Chromosome 16) correspond to genes previously reported to be associated with CD. In addition, a 250-kb region of Chromosome 5p13.1 was found to contain multiple markers with strongly suggestive evidence of disease association (including four markers with p < 10−7). We replicated the results for 5p13.1 by studying 1,266 additional CD patients, 559 additional controls, and 428 trios. Significant evidence of association (p < 4 × 10−4) was found in case/control comparisons with the replication data, while associated alleles were over-transmitted to affected offspring (p < 0.05), thus confirming that the 5p13.1 locus contributes to CD susceptibility. The CD-associated 250-kb region was saturated with 111 SNP markers. Haplotype analysis supports a complex locus architecture with multiple variants contributing to disease susceptibility. The novel 5p13.1 CD locus is contained within a 1.25-Mb gene desert. We present evidence that disease-associated alleles correlate with quantitative expression levels of the prostaglandin receptor EP4, PTGER4, the gene that resides closest to the associated region. Our results identify a major new susceptibility locus for CD, and suggest that genetic variants associated with disease risk at this locus could modulate cis-acting regulatory elements of PTGER4. Individual susceptibility to many common diseases is determined by a combination of environmental and genetic factors. Identifying these genetic risk factors is one of the most important objectives of modern medical genetics, as it paves the way towards personalized medicine and drug target identification. Recent advances in SNP genotyping technology allows systematic association scanning of the entire genome for the detection of novel susceptibility loci. We herein apply this approach to Crohn disease, which afflicts an estimated 0.15% of the people in the developed world and identify a novel susceptibility locus on Chromosome 5. A unique feature of the novel 5p13.1 locus is that it coincides with a 1.25-Mb gene desert. We present evidence that genetic variants at this locus influence the expression levels of the closest gene, PTGER4, located 270 kb away, in the direction of the centromere. PTGER4 encodes the prostaglandin receptor EP4 and is a strong candidate susceptibility gene for Crohn disease as PTGER4 knock-out mice have increased susceptibility to colitis.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- A genome-wide association scan of nonsynonymous SNPs identifies a susceptibility variant for Crohn disease in ATG16L1Nature Genetics, 2006
- A Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies IL23R as an Inflammatory Bowel Disease GeneScience, 2006
- Logistic regression protects against population structure in genetic association studiesGenome Research, 2005
- Single nucleotide polymorphisms in TNFSF15 confer susceptibility to Crohn's diseaseHuman Molecular Genetics, 2005
- Evolutionarily conserved elements in vertebrate, insect, worm, and yeast genomesGenome Research, 2005
- Genetic dissection of a behavioral quantitative trait locus shows that Rgs2 modulates anxiety in miceNature Genetics, 2004
- Exploration, normalization, and summaries of high density oligonucleotide array probe level dataBiostatistics, 2003
- Powerful Regression-Based Quantitative-Trait Linkage Analysis of General PedigreesAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2002
- Merlin—rapid analysis of dense genetic maps using sparse gene flow treesNature Genetics, 2001
- A New Statistical Method for Haplotype Reconstruction from Population DataAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2001