| Literature DB >> 21750679 |
Yannick Allanore1, Mohamad Saad, Philippe Dieudé, Jérôme Avouac, Jorg H W Distler, Philippe Amouyel, Marco Matucci-Cerinic, Gabriella Riemekasten, Paolo Airo, Inga Melchers, Eric Hachulla, Daniele Cusi, H-Erich Wichmann, Julien Wipff, Jean-Charles Lambert, Nicolas Hunzelmann, Kiet Tiev, Paola Caramaschi, Elisabeth Diot, Otylia Kowal-Bielecka, Gabriele Valentini, Luc Mouthon, László Czirják, Nemanja Damjanov, Erika Salvi, Costanza Conti, Martina Müller, Ulf Müller-Ladner, Valeria Riccieri, Barbara Ruiz, Jean-Luc Cracowski, Luc Letenneur, Anne Marie Dupuy, Oliver Meyer, André Kahan, Arnold Munnich, Catherine Boileau, Maria Martinez.
Abstract
Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is an orphan, complex, inflammatory disease affecting the immune system and connective tissue. SSc stands out as a severely incapacitating and life-threatening inflammatory rheumatic disease, with a largely unknown pathogenesis. We have designed a two-stage genome-wide association study of SSc using case-control samples from France, Italy, Germany, and Northern Europe. The initial genome-wide scan was conducted in a French post quality-control sample of 564 cases and 1,776 controls, using almost 500 K SNPs. Two SNPs from the MHC region, together with the 6 loci outside MHC having at least one SNP with a P<10(-5) were selected for follow-up analysis. These markers were genotyped in a post-QC replication sample of 1,682 SSc cases and 3,926 controls. The three top SNPs are in strong linkage disequilibrium and located on 6p21, in the HLA-DQB1 gene: rs9275224, P = 9.18×10(-8), OR = 0.69, 95% CI [0.60-0.79]; rs6457617, P = 1.14×10(-7) and rs9275245, P = 1.39×10(-7). Within the MHC region, the next most associated SNP (rs3130573, P = 1.86×10(-5), OR = 1.36 [1.18-1.56]) is located in the PSORS1C1 gene. Outside the MHC region, our GWAS analysis revealed 7 top SNPs (P<10(-5)) that spanned 6 independent genomic regions. Follow-up of the 17 top SNPs in an independent sample of 1,682 SSc and 3,926 controls showed associations at PSORS1C1 (overall P = 5.70×10(-10), OR:1.25), TNIP1 (P = 4.68×10(-9), OR:1.31), and RHOB loci (P = 3.17×10(-6), OR:1.21). Because of its biological relevance, and previous reports of genetic association at this locus with connective tissue disorders, we investigated TNIP1 expression. A markedly reduced expression of the TNIP1 gene and also its protein product were observed both in lesional skin tissue and in cultured dermal fibroblasts from SSc patients. Furthermore, TNIP1 showed in vitro inhibitory effects on inflammatory cytokine-induced collagen production. The genetic signal of association with TNIP1 variants, together with tissular and cellular investigations, suggests that this pathway has a critical role in regulating autoimmunity and SSc pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21750679 PMCID: PMC3131285 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Description of the study population (post quality control samples).
| CASES | CONTROLS | TOTAL | |||||||
| N | Mean age ±SD (years) | Female (%) | DcSSc | Topo+/ACA+ (%) | N | Mean age ±SD (years) | Female (%) | ||
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| 564 | 56.6±17.4 | 84% | 34.8% | 26% / 38.3% | 488 (Genesys) | 49.2±11.7 | 80% | ||
| 1288 (3C) | 73.99±5.6 | 65.5% | |||||||
| Total DIS | 1776 | 69±11.9 | 69.9% | 2340 | |||||
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| French | 370 | 58.8±14.5 | 82.9% | 28.7% | 27.8% / 50.5% | 1906 | 38.6±21.2 | 55.0% | |
| Italian | 596 | 56.3±13.4 | 88.6% | 25.4% | 32.7% / 46% | 490 (Italian network) | 47.9±13.2 | 84.6% | |
| 721 (Hypergenes) | 59.1±6.7 | 43.3% | |||||||
| Eastern | 151 | 53.1±12.4 | 93.6% | 45.7% | 24.6% / 13.8% | 148 | 30.5±11.6 | 50% | |
| German | 565 | 56.6±13.9 | 88.5% | 35% | 32.4% / 38.4% | 180 (German network) | 55±16.3 | 50% | |
| 481 (KORA study) | 63.1±7.25 | 48.8% | |||||||
| Total REP | 1682 | 56.81±20.9 | 86.5% | 30.5% | 31.2% / 42.8% | 3926 | 50.6±23.2 | 52.5% | 5608 |
DcSSc: diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis; TOPO: anti topoisomerase I antibodies; ACA: anti-centromere antibodies.
Figure 1Genome-wide association results from the discovery phase.
(A) Quantile-quantile plot for test statistics (logistic regression test) for 489,814 SNPs passing quality control. The plot shows a close match to the test statistics expected under the null distribution (λ = 1.03). (B) Manhattan plot representing the P values across the genome. The −log10 P of the logistic regression test (y axis) from 489,814 SNPs in 564 systemic sclerosis patients and 1,776 controls is plotted against its physical position (x-axis) on successive chromosomes. 90 SNPs with P<10−4 lie above the blue horizontal line and are listed in Table S1. Highly significant association was observed with SNPs within the MHC locus, including 1 SNPs that reached the conservative threshold for genome-wide significance (P<10−7).
Genome-wide association and replication for systemic sclerosis risk variants.
| Discovery (564 cases/ 1,776 controls) | Replication (1,682 cases/ 3,926 controls) | Combined (2,246 cases/ 4,684 controls) | |||||||||||||
| Chr. (closest gene) | Pos. (bp) | SNP | Minor/ Major | MAF Cases/ Controls | P | OR | 95%CI | MAF Cases/ Controls | $P | OR | 95%CI | **P | $P | OR | 95%CI |
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| 6p21(PSORS1C1) | 31 214 247 | rs3130573 | G/A | 0.391/ 0.321 | 1.86E-05 | 1.36 | (1.18–1.56) | 0.416/0.373 | 4.98E-03 | 1.13 | (1.04–1.23) | 4.8E-01 | 5.70E-10 | 1.25 | (1.17–1.35) |
| 6p21 (HLA-DQB1) | 32 767 856 | rs9275224 | A/G | 0.405/ 0.496 | 9.18E-08 | 0.69 | (0.6–0.79) | &NA | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 6p21 (HLA-DQB1) | 32 771 829 | rs6457617 | C/T | 0.408/ 0.498 | 1.14E-07 | 0.69 | (0.6–0.79) | 0.345/0.463 | 1.35E-28 | 0.61 | (0.56–0.67) | 1.0E-01 | 2.33E-37 | 0.62 | (0.58–0.67) |
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| 2p24 (RHOB) | 20 548 952 | rs342070 | C/T | 0.293/ 0.226 | 5.56E-06 | 1.42 | (1.22–1.65) | 0.258/0.235 | 2.61E-02 | 1.12 | (1.01–1.23) | 1.9E-01 | 4.66E-06 | 1.20 | (1.11–1.30) |
| 20 552 000 | rs13021401 | T/C | 0.289/ 0.225 | 1.37E-05 | 1.40 | (1.2–1.63) | 0.257/0.232 | 2.47E-02 | 1.12 | (1.01–1.24) | 1.3E-01 | 3.17E-06 | 1.21 | (1.12–1.31) | |
| 3p25 (PPARG/TSEN2) | 12 468 347 | rs9855622 | T/C | 0.145/ 0.096 | 1.64E-06 | 1.66 | (1.35–2.05) | 0.097/0.109 | 9.86E-01 | 1.00 | (0.85–1.17) | 7.6E-03 | 1.05E-01 | 1.11 | (0.94–1.17) |
| 12 234 616 | rs310746 | C/T | 0.121/ 0.08 | 6.15E-05 | 1.55 | (1.25–1.91) | 0.074/0.077 | 8.69E-02 | 0.88 | (0.77–1.02) | 9.6E-01 | 4.22E-01 | 1.05 | (0.98–1.25) | |
| 5q33 (TNIP1) | 150 430 429 | rs4958881 | C/T | 0.166/ 0.115 | 8.26E-06 | 1.54 | (1.28–1.87) | 0.151/0.130 | 4.38E-03 | 1.21 | (1.06–1.38) | 3.2E-01 | 5.79E-06 | 1.29 | (1.17–1.42) |
| 150 435 925 | rs3792783 | G/A | 0.208/ 0.152 | 1.14E-05 | 1.47 | (1.24–1.75) | 0.198/0.166 | 2.09E-03 | 1.21 | (1.07–1.36) | 6.8E-01 | 5.73E-07 | 1.29 | (1.20–1.43) | |
| 150 420 290 | rs2233287 | A/G | 0.139/ 0.096 | 3.71E-05 | 1.55 | (1.26–1.91) | 0.121/0.103 | 4.14E-05 | 1.26 | (1.13–1.40) | 6.8E-01 | 4.68E-09 | 1.31 | (1.15–1.43) | |
| 6p16-q16 (ASCC3) | 101 444 332 | rs9498419 | A/G | 0.522/ 0.446 | 7.71E–06 | 1.37 | (1.19–1.57) | 0.458/0.475 | 1.18E-01 | 0.93 | (0.85–1.02) | 4.6E-01 | 3.15E-01 | 1.04 | (0.97–1.11) |
| 101 445 699 | rs6919745 | T/C | 0.522/ 0.447 | 8.14E-06 | 1.37 | (1.19–1.57) | 0.461/0.478 | 7.47E-02 | 0.93 | (0.85–1.01) | 4.0E-01 | 3.34E-01 | 1.04 | (0.97–1.11) | |
| 7p12-q21 (SEMA3A/HMG17P1) | 84 166 013 | rs4329228 | C/A | 0.305/ 0.239 | 6.66E-06 | 1.42 | (1.22–1.65) | 0.249/0.248 | 5.08E-01 | 0.97 | (0.87–1.07) | 3.4E-01 | 2.05E-01 | 1.06 | (1.04–1.20) |
| 83 976 940 | rs1029541 | T/C | 0.288/ 0.227 | 2.37E-05 | 1.39 | (1.2–1.63) | 0.223/0.231 | 7.93E-01 | 1.01 | (0.92–1.12) | 9.6E-01 | 1.50E-02 | 1.11 | (0.97–1.15) | |
| 11q25 (OPCML) | 132 284 603 | rs2725466 | G/A | 0.403/ 0.328 | 4.60E-06 | 1.39 | (1.21–1.59) | 0.378/0.375 | 5.71E-01 | 0.98 | (0.89–1.06) | 6.2E-01 | 3.55E-03 | 1.11 | (1.04–1.20) |
| 132 287 033 | rs2725437 | C/T | 0.404/ 0.335 | 2.52E-05 | 1.35 | (1.17–1.54) | 0.395/0.387 | 8.33E-01 | 0.99 | (0.91–1.08) | 5.4E-01 | 1.82E-03 | 1.12 | (1.04–1.20) | |
| 132 300 779 | rs10894623 | T/G | 0.317/ 0.256 | 7.75E-05 | 1.34 | (1.16–1.55) | 0.275/0.277 | 7.67E-01 | 0.99 | (0.90–1.08) | 1.4E-01 | 5.83E-02 | 1.08 | (1.00–1.16) | |
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| 1q22-23 (CD247) | 165 687 049 | rs2056626 | G/T | 0.354/0.393 | 1.70E-02 | 0.84 | (0.73–0.97) | 0.36/ 0.4 | 2.90E-05 | 0.82 | (0.75–0.9) | 3.8E-01 | 1.30E-06 | 0.83 | (0.77–0.89) |
| 2q32 (STAT4) | 191 611 003 | rs3821236 | A/G | 0.227/0.203 | 8.70E-02 | 1.16 | (0.98–1.36) | 0.24/ 0.2 | 2.10E-07 | 1.33 | (1.2–1.49) | 8.0E-01 | 2.09E-07 | 1.27 | (1.16–1.39) |
| 191 672 878 | rs7574865 | T/G | 0.272/0.219 | 2.50E-04 | 1.33 | (1.14–1.55) | 0.29/ 0.22 | 1.90E-10 | 1.40 | (1.26–1.56) | 9.0E-01 | 2.26E-13 | 1.38 | (1.27–1.5) | |
| 7q32 (TNPO3-IRF5) | 128 381 419 | rs10488631 | C/T | 0.124/0.093 | 2.50E–03 | 1.39 | (1.12–1.72) | 0.14/ 0.10 | 3.49E-05 | 1.34 | (1.17–1.54) | 4.5E-01 | 4.13E-07 | 1.35 | (1.2–1.51) |
Figure 2Forest plots showing odds ratios and confidence intervals of the HLA-DQB1, PSORS1C1, TNIP1, and RHOB associations in the various populations studied in stage-1 and stage-2 data.
Figure 3Association and linkage disequilibrium patterns at the TNIP1 gene.
(A) Association of SNPs in TNIP1: −log10 P of the logistic regression test for association (y axis) in the GWAS stage of SNPs is plotted against their physical position. The continuous line corresponds to P<10−5, the minimum P value of the top 7 SNPs identified in stage 1. The three SNPs that were followed and replicated in stage 2 are highlighted by a blue circle. Positions are given as NCBI build. (B) Linkage disequilibrim patterns at the TNIP1gene: pairwise LD (D′) are indicated by color gradients: D′≥0.80, red; 0.5≤D′<0.8, pink; 0.2≤D′<0.5, light pink; D′<0.2, white. The 3 SNPs are in strong LD (r2 = 0.57/0.72 between rs3792783 and rs2233287/rs495881). Intron and exon structure of the TNIP1 gene are taken from the UCSC Genome Browser.
Figure 4Decreased TNIP1 expression in SSc patients.
(A) Expression of the TNIP1 protein was decreased ex vivo in SSc lesional skin tissue compared to controls (arrows indicate TNIP-1 positive cells). Shown are representative sections of the 5 patients and controls included in the analysis. (B) Consistent with these findings, a 1.7-fold decrease of TNIP1 mRNA levels was observed in dermal fibroblasts from SSc patients (* indicates a P-value = 0.001 vs. controls). These results were confirmed at the protein level (C).
Figure 5TNIP1 abrogates the profibrotic effects of proinflammatory cytokines on collagen synthesis by healthy fibroblatsts.
(A,B) Healthy dermal fibroblasts treated with recombinant Il1β or Il6 and incubated 24 hours with TNIP1 displayed decreased mRNA levels for (A) COL1A1 (1.6 and 1.4-fold reduction, P = 0.01 and 0.03, respectively) and (B) COL1A2 (1.7 and 1.6-fold reduction, P = 0.02 and 0.03, respectively). No significant effect was observed in cells treated with recombinant TNFα. (C) Collagen content in cell culture supernatants treated with Il1β or Il6 was also reduced upon treatment with TNIP1 (1.5 and 1.8-fold reduction, P = 0.02 and 0.03, respectively). * indicates a P<0.05 versus healthy control fibroblasts treated with recombinant IL1β. ** indicates a P<0.05 versus healthy control fibroblasts treated with recombinant IL6.
Figure 6TNIP1 abrogates the profibrotic effects of proinflammatory cytokines on collagen synthesis by SSc fibroblatsts.
(A,B) SSc dermal fibroblasts treated with recombinant TNFa or IL1β and incubated 24 hours with TNIP1 displayed decreased mRNA levels for (A) COL1A1 (1.6 and 1.5-fold reduction, P = 0.02 and 0.04, respectively) and (B) COL1A2 (1.7 and 1.8-fold reduction, P = 0.02 and 0.009, respectively). No significant effect was observed in cells treated with recombinant IL6. (C) Collagen content in cell culture supernatants treated with TNFa or IL1β was also reduced upon treatment with TNIP1 (1.8 and 2.3-fold reduction, P = 0.04 and 0.03, respectively). * indicates a P<0.05 vs. SSc fibroblasts treated with recombinant TNFa. ** indicates a P<0.05 vs. SSc fibroblasts treated with recombinant IL1 β.