Literature DB >> 20553587

Only one independent genetic association with rheumatoid arthritis within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus in Caucasian sample sets: confirmation of association of rs6822844 with rheumatoid arthritis at a genome-wide level of significance.

Jade E Hollis-Moffatt1, Michael Chen-Xu, Ruth Topless, Nicola Dalbeth, Peter J Gow, Andrew A Harrison, John Highton, Peter B B Jones, Michael Nissen, Malcolm D Smith, Andre van Rij, Gregory T Jones, Lisa K Stamp, Tony R Merriman.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs6822844 within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 gene cluster has been associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Other variants within this cluster, including rs17388568 that is not in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with rs6822844, and rs907715 that is in moderate LD with rs6822844 and rs17388568, have been associated with a number of autoimmune phenotypes, including type 1 diabetes (T1D). Here we aimed to: one, confirm at a genome-wide level of significance association of rs6822844 with RA and, two, evaluate whether or not there were effects independent of rs6822844 on RA at the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus.
METHODS: A total of 842 Australasian RA patients and 1,115 controls of European Caucasian ancestry were genotyped for rs6822844, rs17388568 and rs907715. Meta-analysis of these data with published and publicly-available data was conducted using STATA.
RESULTS: No statistically significant evidence for association was observed in the Australasian sample set for rs6822844 (odds ratio (OR)=0.95 (0.80 to 1.12), P=0.54), or rs17388568 (OR=1.03 (0.90 to 1.19), P=0.65) or rs907715 (OR=0.98 (0.86 to 1.12), P=0.69). When combined in a meta-analysis using data from a total of 9,772 cases and 10,909 controls there was a genome-wide level of significance supporting association of rs6822844 with RA (OR=0.86 (0.82 to 0.91), P=8.8x10(-8), P=2.1x10(-8) including North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium data). Meta-analysis of rs17388568, using a total of 6,585 cases and 7,528 controls, revealed no significant association with RA (OR=1.03, (0.98 to 1.09); P=0.22) and meta-analysis of rs907715 using a total of 2,689 cases and 4,045 controls revealed a trend towards association (OR=0.93 (0.87 to 1.00), P=0.07). However, this trend was not independent of the association at rs6822844.
CONCLUSIONS: The KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 gene cluster, that encodes an interleukin (IL-21) that plays an important role in Th17 cell biology, is the 20th locus for which there is a genome-wide (P<or=5x10(-8)) level of support for association with RA. As for most other autoimmune diseases, with the notable exception of T1D, rs6822844 is the dominant association in the locus. The KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus also confers susceptibility to other autoimmune phenotypes with a heterogeneous pattern of association.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20553587      PMCID: PMC2911910          DOI: 10.1186/ar3053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther        ISSN: 1478-6354            Impact factor:   5.156


Introduction

Genetic associations implicate aberrant activation and regulation of autoreactive T-cells as central to RA. In addition to the established human leukocyte antigen locus DRB1, other genes more recently confirmed (either through wide replication or combined analysis at a genome-wide level of significance, P ≤ 10-8) as playing a role in the development of RA are the protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor 22 gene (PTPN22) [1], cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated 4 (CTLA4) [2], an intergenic region on human chromosome 6 [3,4], signal transducer and activator of transcription 4 (STAT4) [5,6], the TNF receptor-associated factor 1 region (TRAF/C5) [3,7,8], CD40 [9,10], B-lymphocyte kinase (BLK) and the NF-kB family member c-Rel [11]. Aside from HLA-DRB1 and PTPN22, the effects are weak (odds ratio (OR) < 1.3). Most of these loci are also implicated as risk factors in other autoimmune phenotypes [12]. The KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region has been associated with a number of autoimmune phenotypes including type 1 diabetes (T1D) [13], ulcerative colitis [14], Crohn's disease [15], celiac disease [16], Graves' disease (GD) [13], systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) [17], psoriatic arthritis [18], and juvenile idiopathic arthritis [19] (Table 1). There have been several studies testing this region for association with RA in European Caucasian sample sets, with varying levels of supporting evidence (0.24 >P > 2.8 × 10-4) [6,12,20,21]. There is extensive linkage disequilibrium across the region, hampering fine-mapping efforts [13], however it is clear that there are two independent autoimmune associated regions within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 gene cluster. Here, we aimed to consolidate all available data on two SNPs independently associated with autoimmunity within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 gene cluster: rs6822844 (minor allele protective) and rs17388568 (minor allele susceptible), each into a single meta-analysis of association with RA that included previously published data, new genotype data from Australasia, and publicly-available data from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) [22].
Table 1

Summary table of SNPs described in the literature and linkage disequilibrium relationship with rs6822844 and rs17388568

Location (dbSNP130)r2 in relation to SNPGeneDisease
SNP rs6822844 rs17388568 T1DCeDGDUCCDJIAPSAPSRASLE
rs682284412372887110.07-[13,21]- -[16,40,41]- -[14,15,38]- -[14,15]- -[19]- -[18]- -[18]=[6,12,21]-
rs131519611233349520.890.10KIAA1109 (intron)[16,20,40,41]- -[14]- -[14]-[18]- -[18]=
rs68409781237741570.730.13-[16,40,42]- -[14,38]- -[14]-
rs131197231234377630.650.07KIAA1109 (intron)[16,40,42]- -[14,38]- -[14]-
rs119387951232924590.530.16-[16,42]- -[15]-[15]- -
rs117340901234475630.530.16KIAA1109 (intron)[16,42]-
rs126429021237279510.450.22-[16,42]-
rs76841871235606090.440.19TENR (intron)[16,42]-[18]- -[18]-
rs9077151237545030.410.22IL21 (intron)[17]- -
rs173885681235488120.071TENR (intron)[13]+[13]+[12]=
rs22219031237583620.080.88IL21 (intron)[17]+
rs31365341235892230.100.82-[13]+
rs45058481233519420.100.82KIAA1109 (intron)[43]+[20]=
rs6836189123760791--IL21 (intron)[13]+

CD: Crohn's disease; CeD: Celiac's disease; GD: Grave's disease; JIA: juvenile idiopathic arthritis; RA: rheumatoid arthritis; T1D: type 1 diabetes; PS: psoriasis; PSA: psoriatic arthritis; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; UC: ulcerative colitis. The SNPs are arranged into separate LD blocks in relation to rs6822844 and rs17388568. Key to symbols: OR < 0.8, - -; OR 0.8 to < 1.0, -; no effect, =; OR > 1.0 to 1.2, +; OR > 1.2, +

Summary table of SNPs described in the literature and linkage disequilibrium relationship with rs6822844 and rs17388568 CD: Crohn's disease; CeD: Celiac's disease; GD: Grave's disease; JIA: juvenile idiopathic arthritis; RA: rheumatoid arthritis; T1D: type 1 diabetes; PS: psoriasis; PSA: psoriatic arthritis; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; UC: ulcerative colitis. The SNPs are arranged into separate LD blocks in relation to rs6822844 and rs17388568. Key to symbols: OR < 0.8, - -; OR 0.8 to < 1.0, -; no effect, =; OR > 1.0 to 1.2, +; OR > 1.2, +

Materials and methods

Study participants

The Australasian European Caucasian RA samples consist of 842 patients of whom 31% were male. For the RA patients for whom data were available, 81% (601/739) were rheumatoid factor (RF) positive, 68% (333/491) were anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP) antibody positive and 80% (657/820) carried the HLA-DRB1 shared epitope (SE). RA diagnosis was confirmed in all patients by a rheumatologist using the ACR criteria [23]. Patients were recruited from hospital outpatient clinics in the Auckland, Bay of Plenty, Wellington, Christchurch and Otago regions of New Zealand, and from Adelaide in South Australia. European Caucasian control subjects (n = 505) without RA were recruited from the Otago and Auckland regions of New Zealand and were all > 17 years of age. A further 610 controls recruited from the Otago region had been genome-wide scanned using the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0 [24]. These elderly controls were > 60 years of age and in good general health. All subjects provided informed written consent and ethical approval for this study was given by the New Zealand Multi-region Ethics Committee and the Lower South Ethics Committee, and the Research and Ethics Committee of the Repatriation General Hospital, Adelaide. Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples using a guanidine isothiocyanate-chloroform based (RA patients and controls) or modified salting out (elderly controls) extraction method.

Genotype generation

Study participants were genotyped for rs6822844, rs17388568 and rs907715 using TaqMan®, assays ID C_28983601_10, ID C_33129431_10 and ID C_8949748_10 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) respectively. Imputed RA and control genotypes were obtained for rs6822844, rs17388568 and rs907715 from 100% of the WTCCC dataset (1,856 cases, 2,933 controls) using the publicly available WTCCC data [22] using the program IMPUTE [25] and HapMap (NCBI Build 36 (db126b)) CEU data as reference haplotype set. Of the Australasian case sample set, 99.1% of subjects for rs6822844, 99.1% of subjects for rs17388568 and 98.9% of subjects for rs9077015 were successfully genotyped and, for the 505 member control sample set, 97.4% of subjects for rs6822844, 99.4% of subjects for rs17388568 and 99.4% of subjects for rs9077015 were successfully genotyped. The remaining New Zealand control genotypes (n = 610) were obtained from the genome-wide data, with 100% successfully genotyped for rs17388568 and 99.6% imputed for rs6822844 and rs907715.

Statistical analysis

Genotype data were managed using the BC|SNPmax system (Biocomputing Platforms Ltd, Espoo, Finland). Testing for departures from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, for the significance of any difference in minor allele frequencies between patients and controls, calculating odds ratios and conditional association testing was done using the PLINK software package [26]. Logistic regression analysis was applied to the Australasian case-control sample set to stratify data according to gender, RF, CCP and SE status using the STATA 8.0 data analysis and statistics software package (StataCorp, College Station, Texas, USA). Meta-analysis was done using the STATA 8.0 metan software package and cumulative P- values reported. The Mantel-Haenszel test was used to estimate the average conditional common odds ratio between these two independent cohorts and to test for heterogeneity between the groups. P- values from the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) study [3], which could not be combined using meta-analysis owing to unavailability of allele counts, were combined using Fisher's method [27].

Results

We examined rs6822844, rs17388568 and rs907715. The latter SNP was chosen because it had been associated with risk of the systemic autoimmunity SLE in a single study [17] (OR = 0.78, P = 0.002), was in weak LD with both rs6822844 and rs17388568 and we hypothesized that it could represent a possible third effect within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 cluster, perhaps specific to systemic autoimmunity. The imputed genotype data from the WTCCC RA case-control sample revealed no significant association between rs6822844 and RA (Table 2; OR = 0.91 (0.82 to 1.02); P = 0.10) (the WTCCC samples did not overlap with those analysed in Barton et al. [12]). SNP rs6822844 had been genotyped in the NARAC sample set [3], revealing nominal evidence for a protective effect of the minor allele (Table 2; OR = 0.84 (0.74 to 0.96), P = 0.011). We then genotyped rs6822844 across the Australasian case-control sample set, finding no evidence for association between rs6822844 and RA (Table 2; OR = 0.95 (0.80 to 1.12), P = 0.54) although, consistent with the other association studies, the OR was less than one. Meta-analysis of all available data was undertaken (Figure 1). Zhernakova et al. [21] and Coenen et al. [28] both reported association of the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region with RA in overlapping Dutch case-control cohorts. We used data from the former study, as it was the only one to type rs6822844. The meta-analysis provided very strong (genome-wide) support for rs6822844 playing a role in the development of RA (OR = 0.86 (0.82 to 0.91), P = 8.8 × 10-8). The NARAC GWAS data (OR= 0.84 (0.74-0.96), P = 0.011) [7] were combined with the meta-analysis result, yielding P = 2.1 × 10-8.
Table

Association analysis of the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 SNP rs6822844 with RA in seven European case control sample sets

Genotype, no. (frequency)1,2Minor allele, no. (frequency)OR [95% CI] P
Sample Set1/11/22/2
WTCCC [22]
Case1,242 (0.669)553 (0.298)61 (0.033)675 (0.181)0.91 (0.82 to 1.02)0.10
Control1,881 (0.642)958 (0.326)94 (0.032)1,146 (0.195)
Zhernakova [21]
Case748 (0.739)243 (0.240)21 (0.021)285 (0.141)0.72 (0.61 to 0.86)2.0 × 10-4
Control613 (0.663)280 (0.303)31 (0.034)342 (0.185)
NARAC [3]
CaseNANANANA0.84 (0.74 to 0.96)0.011
ControlNANANANA
Teixeira [20]
Case327 (0.753)99 (0.228)8 (0.018)115 (0.132)0.85 (0.65 to 1.12)0.24
Control313 (0.721)110 (0.253)11 (0.025)132 (0.152)
Barton [12]
Case2,739 (0.705)1,052 (0.271)95 (0.024)1,242 (0.160)0.86 (0.79 to 0.94)5.4 × 10-4
Control2,326 (0.674)1,003 (0.290)125 (0.036)1,253 (0.181)
Daha [6]
CaseNANANA285 (0.162)0.84 (0.70 to 1.00)0.051
ControlNANANA325 (0.188)
Australasian
Case583 (0.699)221 (0.265)30 (0.036)281 (0.168)0.95 (0.80 to 1.12)0.54
Control743 (0.674)330 (0.299)29 (0.026)388 (0.176)

(1) There were no significant departures from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, all P > 0.06

(2) Genotype data were imputed in the WTCCC sample set, and directly genotyped in all others

Figure 1

Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from data presented in Table 2. There was no evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.25).

Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from data presented in Table 2. There was no evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.25). Association analysis of the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 SNP rs6822844 with RA in seven European case control sample sets (1) There were no significant departures from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, all P > 0.06 (2) Genotype data were imputed in the WTCCC sample set, and directly genotyped in all others For rs17388568, the genotype data from the WTCCC case-control sample revealed a weak association between rs17388568 and RA, with a susceptibility effect of the minor allele (Table 3; OR = 1.14 (1.04 to 1.25), P = 0.005). We genotyped rs17388568 across the Australasian case-control sample set, finding no evidence for association between rs17388568 and RA (Table 3; OR = 1.03 (0.90 to 1.19), P = 0.66), a result that was consistent with a study of a UK case-control sample set by Barton et al. [12] (Table 3; OR = 0.97 (0.91 to 1.05), P = 0.47). Meta-analysis of all the available data was done (Figure 2), with the combined analysis showing no significant role for rs17388568 in the development of RA (OR = 1.03, (0.98 to 1.09), P = 0.22). At rs907715, the imputed WTCCC genotype data also revealed a weak association (Table 3; OR = 0.92 (0.84 to 1.00), P = 0.055). Genotyping of the Australasian sample set and combined analysis with the WTCCC data (Table 3; Figure 3) slightly weakened the evidence for association of rs907715 with RA (OR = 0.93 (0.87 to 1.00), P = 0.07). Neither rs17388568 nor rs907715 nor any surrogate SNP was present in the NARAC data. Given the moderate LD between rs907715 and rs6822844 (Table 1), rs907715 was tested for association in the combined WTCCC and Australasian samples conditional on genotype at rs6822844. This revealed that the trend towards association seen for rs907715 was not independent of the association seen at rs6822844 (P = 0.38).
Table 3

Association analysis of the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 SNPs rs17388568 and rs907715 with RA in three European Caucasian case-control sample sets

Genotype, no. (frequency)1,2Minor allele, no. (frequency)OR [95% CI] P
Sample Set1/11/242/2
rs17388568
WTCCC [22]
Case938 (0.505)773 (0.416)145 (0.078)1,063 (0.286)1.14 (1.04 to 1.25)0.005
Control1,610 (0.549)1,119 (0.381)204 (0.070)1,527 (0.260)
Barton [12]
Case2,057 (0.528)1,530 (0.393)308 (0.079)2,146 (0.275)0.97 (0.91 to 1.05)0.47
Control1,797 (0.516)1,415 (0.406)271 (0.077)1,957 (0.281)
Australasian
Case453 (0.543)305 (0.366)76 (0.091)457 (0.274)1.03 (0.90 to 1.19)0.654
Control584 (0.584)461 (0.415)67 (0.060)595 (0.268)
rs907715
WTCCC [22]
Case835 (0.450)822 (0.443)199 (0.107)1,220 (0.329)0.92 (0.84 to 1.00)0.055
Control1,251 (0.427)1,324 (0.451)358 (0.122)2,040 (0.349)
Australasian
Case365 (0.438)374 (0.449)94 (0.113)562 (0.337)0.98 (0.86 to 1.12)0.687
Control468 (0.421)524 (0.471)120 (0.108)764 (0.344)

(1) There was one significant departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, P = 0.02 in Australasian cases

(2) Genotype data were imputed in the WTCCC sample set for rs907715, and directly genotyped in all others

Figure 2

Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from the WTCCC [22], Barton et al. [12], and the Australasian case-control sample sets. There was evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.03)

Figure 3

Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from WTCCC [22] and the Australasian case-control sample sets. There was no evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.48).

Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from the WTCCC [22], Barton et al. [12], and the Australasian case-control sample sets. There was evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.03) Meta-analysis of the . Combined odds ratio values from WTCCC [22] and the Australasian case-control sample sets. There was no evidence for heterogeneity between sample sets (P = 0.48). Association analysis of the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 SNPs rs17388568 and rs907715 with RA in three European Caucasian case-control sample sets (1) There was one significant departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, P = 0.02 in Australasian cases (2) Genotype data were imputed in the WTCCC sample set for rs907715, and directly genotyped in all others The Australasian sample set was further examined by stratifying rs6822844 according to gender, RF, CCP and SE status (Table 4). This revealed no specific association to any particular sub-phenotypes analysed (P > 0.05). It should be noted that the power to detect association with sub-phenotype within the Australasian sample set was limited; for example, in the analysis with the largest amount of data available (RF) there was adequate power (> 70%) to detect an allele frequency difference between RF positive and negative cases only when the difference was equivalent to an OR > 1.5.
Table 4

Logistic regression analyses of the rs6822844 genotype frequencies in Australasian RA patients according to sub-phenotype

rs6822844
GGGTTT P
Gender
Male181 (0.69)72 (0.28)9 (0.03)0.997
Female352 (0.69)139 (0.27)17 (0.03)
Rheumatoid factor
Yes419 (0.70)155 (0.26)22 (0.04)0.834
No95 (0.70)38 (0.28)3 (0.02)
anti-CCP
Yes232 (0.70)87 (0.26)12 (0.04)0.511
No103 (0.66)50 (0.32)4 (0.03)
SE status
0133 (0.69)45 (0.28)5 (0.03)0.974
1 or 2456 (0.70)168 (0.26)25 (0.04)

Anti-CCP, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies; NA, not available; RF, rheumatoid factor antibodies; SE, shared epitope status

Logistic regression analyses of the rs6822844 genotype frequencies in Australasian RA patients according to sub-phenotype Anti-CCP, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies; NA, not available; RF, rheumatoid factor antibodies; SE, shared epitope status

Discussion

Here we have combined published studies testing association of two SNPs, rs6822844 and rs17388568, located within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region with RA: the former with two Dutch [6,21], one UK [12], and one Western Europe sample set [20]; and the latter with one UK sample set [12] - along with new Australasian data, and data from the WTCCC [22]. Meta-analysis (Figure 1) showed a consistent protective effect for the minor allele of rs6822844 with RA (OR = 0.86, P = 8.8 × 10-8). A similar protective effect was also observed in the NARAC GWAS for rs6822844 (OR = 0.84, P = 0.011), with combined evidence for association with RA of P = 2.1 × 10-8 when combined with our meta-analysis P- value. Our analysis used the same European Caucasian RA sample sets recently meta-analysed by Maita et al. [29], with the addition of the WTCCC, Barton et al. [12], Australasian and NARAC [3] data. Meta-analysis of the T1D-associated SNP rs17385868 (Figure 2) on the other hand, did not reveal any significant association between the minor allele of rs17388568 and RA (OR = 1.03, P = 0.22). Note that SNP rs4505848, in strong LD with rs17385868, is more strongly associated with T1D (Table 1). Whilst there was weak evidence for association at rs907715 (Table 3), in a direction consistent with that previously observed in SLE [17], this effect appears to be dependent on rs6822844. When this paper was under review a genome-wide association scan meta-analysis in RA was published, in 5,539 autoantibody positive cases and 20,169 controls of European descent [30], with P = 7 × 10-4 at rs6822844. We meta-analysed these data with data presented in Table 2 (removing the overlapping WTCCC samples), yielding OR = 0.86 (0.82 to 0.89), P < 1 × 10-10. The rs6822844 data provide compelling evidence supporting a role for the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus in etiology of RA in Caucasian populations. Including the HLA region and the 10 loci confirmed by Stahl et al. [30] (note that Stahl et al. did not confirm KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 at a genome-wide level of significance), KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 is the 20th locus associated with RA at a genome-wide level of significance (P ≤ 5 × 10-8). The association at rs6822844 dominates at this locus, with no evidence for an independent effect at rs17385868, as is seen in T1D (Table 1) [13]. The KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region was first implicated in autoimmunity after a GWAS in T1D [13,22] and has since been associated, also with a genome-wide level of support, with celiac disease [16] and ulcerative colitis [14] and, with lower supporting evidence, with SLE, psoriatic arthritis, Graves' disease and juvenile idiopathic arthritis [13,17-19] (Table 1). The region is characterized by a high degree of linkage disequilibrium [13], meaning that the underlying disease-causing variant(s) and gene(s) have not yet been determined. Collectively, these data point to at least two independent associations within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region, with the pattern of association differing between autoimmune phenotypes (Table 1); one marked by rs17388568 (in the TENR gene) and the other by rs6822844 (which maps between IL-2 and IL-21). There is no appreciable linkage disequilibrium between rs17388568 and rs6822844 (r2 = 0.07 in HapMap CEU samples). Different patterns of association are evident in the different autoimmune phenotypes. For example (referring to the risk conferred by the minor allele), susceptibility at rs17388568 and protection at rs6822844 is observed in T1D [13,21], some evidence for protection is seen at rs17388568 in Graves' disease [13], there is no evidence for association of rs17388568 (or markers in high LD) with RA (Figure 2) whereas rs6822844 confers protection (Table 1). The studies in Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, celiac disease, psoriatic arthritis, and JIA are consistent in reporting the rs6822844-mediated minor allele protective effect [14-16,18,19] (Table 1), with little data available on rs17388568 in comparison to rs6822844. The single study in SLE [17] did not include SNPs in LD with rs6822844, however there was evidence for a susceptibility effect at rs17388568 (using rs2221903 which is in strong LD with rs17388568, Table 1). Collectively, these studies point to heterogeneity at rs17388568 between RA and other autoimmune phenotypes (T1D, GD, SLE) with which RA shares other genes and clinical features. Within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 gene cluster, IL-21 is of particular interest in the context of RA, and the Th1/Th17 axis in which IL-23R is involved. IL-21 is required for differentiation of naïve human CD4+ T cells into Th17 cells [31], whereas IL-23 is critical in the expansion and maintenance of Th17 cells [32,33]. It is important to note that Th17 cells produce a variety of cytokines including IL-17A, IL-17F, IL-21 and IL-22. Human studies have demonstrated that IL-21 receptor (IL-21R)-positive cells are significantly increased in inflamed synovial tissues of RA patients compared to controls and that IL-21 enhances local T-cell activation, proliferation and proinflammatory cytokine secretion [34,35]. Alongside these findings, animal studies demonstrate that IL-21R deficient mice have normal T-cell and NK cell development but fail to develop spontaneous autoimmune disease suggesting that IL-21 plays a vital role in the development of autoimmune disease in rodents. Studies using arthritic mice and rats also demonstrate that inhibition of IL-21 expression correlates with modulation of serum IL-6 levels and improvements in disease severity [36]. However, it remains to be determined whether inhibition of IL-21 in humans with RA will have a similar beneficial effect given the significant differences between Th17 cell biology in mice and men. Given the importance of Th17 cells in autoimmunity [37], the differential genetic effects observed in various autoimmune phenotypes mediated by the IL23R and KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 regions, evidence for genetic interaction between the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 region and IL23R (in ulcerative colitis at least) [38], there are reasonable grounds for considering the hypothesis that genetic control of the Th1/Th17 axis is centered on cytokines (and their receptors) important in Th17 biology. It is important to note that not all RA patients have evidence of IL-17A within synovial tissue [39] and the role of IL-17A appears to be as an amplifier of inflammation rather than an absolute requirement for inflammation in RA. One possible explanation is genetic variation in the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus that results in non-functional IL-21 and hence lack of IL-17A or vice versa. Regulation of this axis may be an important factor in determining the risk to particular autoimmune phenotypes, which may have implications for selection of targeted biological therapies within an individual. What will be important in understanding molecular control of autoimmunity will be association studies in large sample sets from different autoimmune phenotypes that comprehensively capture common variation in the IL23R and KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 loci, fine-mapping of the genetic effects and analysis of interaction between the disease-associated variants, both within and between loci.

Conclusions

Genotyping of an Australasian RA case-control sample set, and meta-analysis with published and publicly-available data confirm at a genome-wide level of significance the rs6822844 SNP within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus to be a risk factor in RA (P = 2.1 × 10-8; OR = 0.86). There was no evidence for an independent effect on RA mediated by other variants within the KIAA1109-TENR-IL2-IL21 locus, as is seen in type 1diabetes.

Abbreviations

BLK: B-lymphocyte kinase; CCP: cyclic citrullinated peptide; GD: Graves' disease; GWAS: genome-wide association scan; IL: interleukin; LD: linkage disequilibrium; NZ: New Zealand; OR: odds ratio; NARAC: North America Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium; RA: rheumatoid arthritis; RF: rheumatoid factor; SE: shared epitope; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; SNP: single nucleotide polymorphism; STAT4: signal transducer and activator of transcription 4; T1D: type 1 diabetes; WTCCC: Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium;

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

JEH-M, MC-X and TRM planned the study design and oversaw its execution. RT provided technical and analytical support. JEH-M, MC-X, ND, PJG, AAH, JH, PBBJ, MN, MDS, AR, GJ and LKS took part in clinical recruitment and data acquisition. JEH-M, MC-X, RT, ND, PJG, AAH, JH, PBBJ, MN, MDS, AR, GJ, LKS and TRM prepared the manuscript.
  41 in total

1.  Six new coeliac disease loci replicated in an Italian population confirm association with coeliac disease.

Authors:  J Romanos; D Barisani; G Trynka; A Zhernakova; M T Bardella; C Wijmenga
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2008-09-19       Impact factor: 6.318

2.  Genetic association of interleukin-21 polymorphisms with systemic lupus erythematosus.

Authors:  A H Sawalha; K M Kaufman; J A Kelly; A J Adler; T Aberle; J Kilpatrick; E K Wakeland; Q-Z Li; A E Wandstrat; D R Karp; J A James; J T Merrill; P Lipsky; J B Harley
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2007-08-24       Impact factor: 19.103

Review 3.  Th17 cells: from precursors to players in inflammation and infection.

Authors:  Amit Awasthi; Vijay K Kuchroo
Journal:  Int Immunol       Date:  2009-03-04       Impact factor: 4.823

4.  Genetic variants in the region harbouring IL2/IL21 associated with ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  E A M Festen; P Goyette; R Scott; V Annese; A Zhernakova; J Lian; C Lefèbvre; S R Brant; J H Cho; M S Silverberg; K D Taylor; D J de Jong; P C Stokkers; D Mcgovern; O Palmieri; J-P Achkar; R J Xavier; M J Daly; R H Duerr; C Wijmenga; R K Weersma; J D Rioux
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2009-02-06       Impact factor: 23.059

5.  IL-21 and TGF-beta are required for differentiation of human T(H)17 cells.

Authors:  Li Yang; David E Anderson; Clare Baecher-Allan; William D Hastings; Estelle Bettelli; Mohamed Oukka; Vijay K Kuchroo; David A Hafler
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-05-11       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Newly identified genetic risk variants for celiac disease related to the immune response.

Authors:  Karen A Hunt; Alexandra Zhernakova; Graham Turner; Graham A R Heap; Lude Franke; Marcel Bruinenberg; Jihane Romanos; Lotte C Dinesen; Anthony W Ryan; Davinder Panesar; Rhian Gwilliam; Fumihiko Takeuchi; William M McLaren; Geoffrey K T Holmes; Peter D Howdle; Julian R F Walters; David S Sanders; Raymond J Playford; Gosia Trynka; Chris J J Mulder; M Luisa Mearin; Wieke H M Verbeek; Valerie Trimble; Fiona M Stevens; Colm O'Morain; Nicholas P Kennedy; Dermot Kelleher; Daniel J Pennington; David P Strachan; Wendy L McArdle; Charles A Mein; Martin C Wapenaar; Panos Deloukas; Ralph McGinnis; Ross McManus; Cisca Wijmenga; David A van Heel
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2008-03-02       Impact factor: 38.330

7.  Association of the autoimmunity locus 4q27 with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.

Authors:  H M Albers; F A S Kurreeman; G Stoeken-Rijsbergen; D M C Brinkman; S S M Kamphuis; M A J van Rossum; H J Girschick; C Wouters; R K Saurenmann; E Hoppenreijs; P Slagboom; J J Houwing-Duistermaat; W Verduijn; T W J Huizinga; R Ten Cate; R E M Toes; M W Schilham
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2009-03

8.  Common variants at CD40 and other loci confer risk of rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Soumya Raychaudhuri; Elaine F Remmers; Annette T Lee; Rachel Hackett; Candace Guiducci; Noël P Burtt; Lauren Gianniny; Benjamin D Korman; Leonid Padyukov; Fina A S Kurreeman; Monica Chang; Joseph J Catanese; Bo Ding; Sandra Wong; Annette H M van der Helm-van Mil; Benjamin M Neale; Jonathan Coblyn; Jing Cui; Paul P Tak; Gert Jan Wolbink; J Bart A Crusius; Irene E van der Horst-Bruinsma; Lindsey A Criswell; Christopher I Amos; Michael F Seldin; Daniel L Kastner; Kristin G Ardlie; Lars Alfredsson; Karen H Costenbader; David Altshuler; Tom W J Huizinga; Nancy A Shadick; Michael E Weinblatt; Niek de Vries; Jane Worthington; Mark Seielstad; Rene E M Toes; Elizabeth W Karlson; Ann B Begovich; Lars Klareskog; Peter K Gregersen; Mark J Daly; Robert M Plenge
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2008-09-14       Impact factor: 38.330

9.  A large-scale rheumatoid arthritis genetic study identifies association at chromosome 9q33.2.

Authors:  Monica Chang; Charles M Rowland; Veronica E Garcia; Steven J Schrodi; Joseph J Catanese; Annette H M van der Helm-van Mil; Kristin G Ardlie; Christopher I Amos; Lindsey A Criswell; Daniel L Kastner; Peter K Gregersen; Fina A S Kurreeman; Rene E M Toes; Tom W J Huizinga; Michael F Seldin; Ann B Begovich
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2008-06-27       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Re-evaluation of putative rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility genes in the post-genome wide association study era and hypothesis of a key pathway underlying susceptibility.

Authors:  Anne Barton; Wendy Thomson; Xiayi Ke; Steve Eyre; Anne Hinks; John Bowes; Laura Gibbons; Darren Plant; Anthony G Wilson; Ioanna Marinou; Ann Morgan; Paul Emery; Sophia Steer; Lynne Hocking; David M Reid; Paul Wordsworth; Pille Harrison; Jane Worthington
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2008-04-22       Impact factor: 6.150

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  16 in total

Review 1.  Interleukins and interleukin receptors in rheumatoid arthritis: Research, diagnostics and clinical implications.

Authors:  Lili Magyari; Dalma Varszegi; Erzsebet Kovesdi; Patricia Sarlos; Bernadett Farago; Andras Javorhazy; Katalin Sumegi; Zsolt Banfai; Bela Melegh
Journal:  World J Orthop       Date:  2014-09-18

Review 2.  Pouring fuel on the fire: Th17 cells, the environment, and autoimmunity.

Authors:  Patrick R Burkett; Gerd Meyer zu Horste; Vijay K Kuchroo
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2015-05-11       Impact factor: 14.808

3.  Genome-wide association study to identify variants associated with acute severe vaso-occlusive pain in sickle cell anemia.

Authors:  Shruti Chaturvedi; Pallav Bhatnagar; Christopher J Bean; Martin H Steinberg; Jaqueline N Milton; James F Casella; Emily Barron-Casella; Dan E Arking; Michael R DeBaun
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2017-06-05       Impact factor: 22.113

4.  Estimating the Ages of Selection Signals from Different Epochs in Human History.

Authors:  Shigeki Nakagome; Gorka Alkorta-Aranburu; Roberto Amato; Bryan Howie; Benjamin M Peter; Richard R Hudson; Anna Di Rienzo
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2015-11-05       Impact factor: 16.240

5.  IL2/IL21 region polymorphism influences response to rituximab in systemic lupus erythematosus patients.

Authors:  Ana Márquez; Cristina Lucía Dávila-Fajardo; Gema Robledo; José Luis Callejas Rubio; Enrique de Ramón Garrido; Francisco J García-Hernández; Rocío González-León; Raquel Ríos-Fernández; José Cabeza Barrera; Ma Francisca González-Escribano; Ma Teresa Camps García; Ma Jesús Castillo Palma; Ma del Mar Ayala; Norberto Ortego-Centeno; Javier Martín
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2013-05-05       Impact factor: 2.316

6.  Long-Range Transcriptional Control of the Il2 Gene by an Intergenic Enhancer.

Authors:  Parul Mehra; Andrew D Wells
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2015-09-08       Impact factor: 4.272

7.  The genetic basis of graves' disease.

Authors:  Rafał Płoski; Konrad Szymański; Tomasz Bednarczuk
Journal:  Curr Genomics       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 2.236

8.  Caucasian and Asian specific rheumatoid arthritis risk loci reveal limited replication and apparent allelic heterogeneity in north Indians.

Authors:  Pushplata Prasad; Ashok Kumar; Rajiva Gupta; Ramesh C Juyal; B K Thelma
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-02-15       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Implication of IL-2/IL-21 region in systemic sclerosis genetic susceptibility.

Authors:  Lina-Marcela Diaz-Gallo; Carmen P Simeon; Jasper C Broen; Norberto Ortego-Centeno; Lorenzo Beretta; Madelon C Vonk; Patricia E Carreira; Sofia Vargas; José Andrés Román-Ivorra; Miguel A González-Gay; Carlos Tolosa; Francisco Javier López-Longo; Gerard Espinosa; Esther F Vicente; Roger Hesselstrand; Gabriela Riemekasten; Torsten Witte; Jörg H W Distler; Alexandre E Voskuyl; Annemie J Schuerwegh; Paul G Shiels; Annika Nordin; Leonid Padyukov; Anna-Maria Hoffmann-Vold; Raffaella Scorza; Claudio Lunardi; Paolo Airo; Jacob M van Laar; Nicolas Hunzelmann; Birgit S Gathof; Alexander Kreuter; Ariane Herrick; Jane Worthington; Christopher P Denton; Xiaodong Zhou; Frank C Arnett; Carmen Fonseca; Bobby P C Koeleman; Shervin Assasi; Timothy R D J Radstake; Maureen D Mayes; Javier Martín
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2012-11-21       Impact factor: 19.103

10.  Gene expression profile of peripheral blood monocytes: a step towards the molecular diagnosis of celiac disease?

Authors:  Martina Galatola; Valentina Izzo; Donatella Cielo; Marinita Morelli; Giuseppina Gambino; Delia Zanzi; Caterina Strisciuglio; Maria Pia Sperandeo; Luigi Greco; Renata Auricchio
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-17       Impact factor: 3.240

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