| Literature DB >> 23415668 |
Audrey V Grant1, Jamila El Baghdadi, Ayoub Sabri, Safa El Azbaoui, Kebir Alaoui-Tahiri, Ismail Abderrahmani Rhorfi, Yasser Gharbaoui, Ahmed Abid, Majid Benkirane, Vaomalala Raharimanga, Vincent Richard, Marianna Orlova, Anne Boland, Mélanie Migaud, Satoshi Okada, Daniel K Nolan, Jacinta Bustamante, Luis B Barreiro, Erwin Schurr, Stephanie Boisson-Dupuis, Voahangy Rasolofo, Jean-Laurent Casanova, Laurent Abel.
Abstract
Only a small fraction of individuals infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis develop clinical tuberculosis (TB) in their lifetime. Genetic epidemiological evidence suggests a genetic determinism of pulmonary TB (PTB), but the molecular basis of genetic predisposition to PTB remains largely unknown. We used a positional-cloning approach to carry out ultrafine linkage-disequilibrium mapping of a previously identified susceptibility locus in chromosomal region 8q12-13 by genotyping 3,216 SNPs in a family-based Moroccan sample including 286 offspring with PTB. We observed 44 PTB-associated SNPs (p < 0.01), which were genotyped in an independent set of 317 cases and 650 controls from Morocco. A single signal, consisting of two correlated SNPs close to TOX, rs1568952 and rs2726600 (combined p = 1.1 × 10(-5) and 9.2 × 10(-5), respectively), was replicated. Stronger evidence of association was found in individuals who developed PTB before the age of 25 years (combined p for rs1568952 = 4.4 × 10(-8); odds ratio of PTB for AA versus AG/GG = 3.09 [1.99-4.78]). The association with rs2726600 (p = 0.04) was subsequently replicated in PTB-affected subjects under 25 years in a study of 243 nuclear families from Madagascar. Stronger evidence of replication in Madagascar was obtained for additional SNPs in strong linkage disequilibrium with the two initial SNPs (p = 0.003 for rs2726597), further confirming the signal. We thus identified around rs1568952 and rs2726600 a cluster of SNPs strongly associated with early-onset PTB in Morocco and Madagascar. SNP rs2726600 is located in a transcription-factor binding site in the 3' region of TOX, and further functional explorations will focus on CD4 T lymphocytes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23415668 PMCID: PMC3591857 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.01.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025