| Literature DB >> 23555300 |
Jing Cui1, Eli A Stahl, Saedis Saevarsdottir, Corinne Miceli, Dorothee Diogo, Gosia Trynka, Towfique Raj, Maša Umiċeviċ Mirkov, Helena Canhao, Katsunori Ikari, Chikashi Terao, Yukinori Okada, Sara Wedrén, Johan Askling, Hisashi Yamanaka, Shigeki Momohara, Atsuo Taniguchi, Koichiro Ohmura, Fumihiko Matsuda, Tsuneyo Mimori, Namrata Gupta, Manik Kuchroo, Ann W Morgan, John D Isaacs, Anthony G Wilson, Kimme L Hyrich, Marieke Herenius, Marieke E Doorenspleet, Paul-Peter Tak, J Bart A Crusius, Irene E van der Horst-Bruinsma, Gert Jan Wolbink, Piet L C M van Riel, Mart van de Laar, Henk-Jan Guchelaar, Nancy A Shadick, Cornelia F Allaart, Tom W J Huizinga, Rene E M Toes, Robert P Kimberly, S Louis Bridges, Lindsey A Criswell, Larry W Moreland, João Eurico Fonseca, Niek de Vries, Barbara E Stranger, Philip L De Jager, Soumya Raychaudhuri, Michael E Weinblatt, Peter K Gregersen, Xavier Mariette, Anne Barton, Leonid Padyukov, Marieke J H Coenen, Elizabeth W Karlson, Robert M Plenge.
Abstract
Anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha (anti-TNF) biologic therapy is a widely used treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). It is unknown why some RA patients fail to respond adequately to anti-TNF therapy, which limits the development of clinical biomarkers to predict response or new drugs to target refractory cases. To understand the biological basis of response to anti-TNF therapy, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of more than 2 million common variants in 2,706 RA patients from 13 different collections. Patients were treated with one of three anti-TNF medications: etanercept (n = 733), infliximab (n = 894), or adalimumab (n = 1,071). We identified a SNP (rs6427528) at the 1q23 locus that was associated with change in disease activity score (ΔDAS) in the etanercept subset of patients (P = 8 × 10(-8)), but not in the infliximab or adalimumab subsets (P>0.05). The SNP is predicted to disrupt transcription factor binding site motifs in the 3' UTR of an immune-related gene, CD84, and the allele associated with better response to etanercept was associated with higher CD84 gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (P = 1 × 10(-11) in 228 non-RA patients and P = 0.004 in 132 RA patients). Consistent with the genetic findings, higher CD84 gene expression correlated with lower cross-sectional DAS (P = 0.02, n = 210) and showed a non-significant trend for better ΔDAS in a subset of RA patients with gene expression data (n = 31, etanercept-treated). A small, multi-ethnic replication showed a non-significant trend towards an association among etanercept-treated RA patients of Portuguese ancestry (n = 139, P = 0.4), but no association among patients of Japanese ancestry (n = 151, P = 0.8). Our study demonstrates that an allele associated with response to etanercept therapy is also associated with CD84 gene expression, and further that CD84 expression correlates with disease activity. These findings support a model in which CD84 genotypes and/or expression may serve as a useful biomarker for response to etanercept treatment in RA patients of European ancestry.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23555300 PMCID: PMC3610685 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Samples and clinical data.
| Collection (analysis batch): | REF | BRAGGSS | DREAM | ReAct | Total |
|
| 959 | 595 | 880 | 272 | 2706 |
|
| |||||
|
| 365 | 259 | 109 | 0 | 733 |
|
| 415 | 268 | 211 | 0 | 894 |
|
| 174 | 68 | 557 | 272 | 1071 |
|
| |||||
|
| 432 | 161 | 313 | 92 | 998 |
|
| 243 | 258 | 359 | 131 | 991 |
|
| 322 | 176 | 208 | 49 | 755 |
|
| mixed | Affy 500K | Illu550K +650K | Illumina OmniExpress | |
|
| |||||
|
| 53.6 (12.7) | 57.4 (10.9) | 54.8 (12.9) | 53.9 (10.8) | |
|
| 6.7 (9.4) | 14 (9.8) | 9.6 (9.5) | 12 (9.1) | |
|
| 75.6 | 77.3 | 68.3 | 77.9 | |
|
| 87 | 78 | 80 | 70 | |
|
| 65.6 | 85.6 | 76.0 | 50.0 | |
|
| 5.5 (1.2) | 6.7 (0.9) | 5.5 (1.2) | 5.9 (1.0) | |
|
| 1.9 (1.6) | 2.5 (1.5) | 1.9 (1.3) | 2.2 (1.3) | |
|
| 4.6 | 5.6 | 3 | 3 | |
|
| All | Observational | Observational | Observational | |
8 patients had no TNF drug information.
38 patients had only EULAR response (good, moderate or none) clinical data.
ABCoN, GENRA are prospective cohorts, BeSt, eRA and TEAR are randomized controlled trial (RCT), and rest of REF group are observational cohorts.
Figure 1GWAS results for the ΔDAS phenotype.
Shown are strengths of association (−Log10 P-value) for each SNP versus position along chromosomes 1 to 22. A) All samples (n = 2,706). B) Etanercept-treated patients (n = 733). C) Infliximab-treated patients (n = 894). D) Adalimumab-treated patients (n = 1,071).
Figure 2Association results and SNP annotations in the 1q23 CD84 locus.
A) Regional association plots with ΔDAS (top panel) and with CD84 expression (bottom panel), showing strengths of association (−Log10 P-value) versus position (Kb) along chromosome 1. B) Schematic of CD84 gene structure (RefSeq gene model, box exons connected by diagonal lines, arrow indicates direction of transcription) with strong enhancer chromatin states (orange rectangles) and SNPs in high LD (r2>0.8) with rs6427528 (vertical ticks). SNPs in enhancers are labeled below. C) Annotations of strong-enhancer rs6427528 proxy SNPs; listed are SNP rs-ID (major and minor alleles), conservation score, cell line with DNAse footprint if present, and transcription factor binding sites altered. 1- Genomic evolutionary rate profiling (GERP) conservation score, where a score >2 indicates conservation across mammals. 2- DNase footprint data are compiled from publicly available experiments by HaploReg. 3- Position weight matrix logos show transcription factor consensus binding sites with nucleotide bases proportional to binding importance. SNP position is boxed. Note that the rs10797077 AIRE_2 and the rs6427528 SREBP_4 motifs are on the minus strand (base complements correspond to SNP alleles), with the SREBP motif shown upside down to align with the rs6427528 KROX motif on the positive strand. Data are from HaploReg.
Figure 31q23/CD84 genotype association plots for ΔDAS and CD84 gene expression.
Shown are ΔDAS in our GWAS in etanercept-treated patients (top panel, n = 733; n = 634 with the GG genotype and n = 99 with the GA or AA genotype) and CD84 expression in our eQTL results (bottom panel, n = 228 non-RA patients; n = 178 with the GG genotype and n = 50 with the GA or AA genotype). The rare-allele homozygous genotype AA was observed four times in our ΔDAS GWAS and was pooled with the heterozygous GA genotype for this figure; AA homozygotes were not observed in the CD84 eQTL data. Association analyses reported in the text regressed phenotype (ΔDAS, P = 8×10−8; CD84 expression, P = 1×10−11) on minor-allele dosage (range 0–2).
Figure 4CD84 expression level and clinical features.
Analyses are shown in RA patients from the BRASS and ABCoN registries, for baseline DAS (top panel, n = 210; R2 = 0.02, p = 0.02) and ΔDAS (bottom panel, n = 31; R2 = 0.001, p = 0.46). Best-fit linear regression lines are shown in black, with shaded regions showing linear regression model (slope and intercept) 95% confidence intervals. CD84 expression levels were quantile normalized, and ΔDAS values were adjusted for age, gender and baseline DAS.
Figure 5Replication and overall results for the CD84 SNP rs6427528.
Forest plot shows each cohort, sample size and linear regression beta coefficient estimates with symbol size proportional to cohort sample size and thin horizontal lines showing beta 95% CIs. Inverse variance weighted meta-analysis results are shown in bold for GWAS, GWAS+European (Portuguese) replication samples, and for GWAS+European+Asian (Japanese) replication samples, with diamond widths indicating beta 95% CIs.