| Literature DB >> 25986216 |
Hiromi Toyoda1, Taku Miyagawa2, Asako Koike3, Takashi Kanbayashi4, Aya Imanishi4, Yohei Sagawa4, Nozomu Kotorii5, Tatayu Kotorii6, Yuji Hashizume7, Kimihiro Ogi7, Hiroshi Hiejima7, Yuichi Kamei8, Akiko Hida9, Masayuki Miyamoto10, Makoto Imai11, Yota Fujimura12, Yoshiyuki Tamura12, Azusa Ikegami13, Yamato Wada14, Shunpei Moriya15, Hirokazu Furuya16, Masaki Takeuchi17, Yohei Kirino18, Akira Meguro19, Elaine F Remmers20, Yoshiya Kawamura21, Takeshi Otowa22, Akinori Miyashita23, Koichi Kashiwase24, Seik-Soon Khor1, Maria Yamasaki1, Ryozo Kuwano23, Tsukasa Sasaki25, Jun Ishigooka15, Kenji Kuroda14, Kazuhiko Kume26, Shigeru Chiba12, Naoto Yamada11, Masako Okawa27, Koichi Hirata10, Nobuhisa Mizuki19, Naohisa Uchimura7, Tetsuo Shimizu4, Yuichi Inoue28, Yutaka Honda29, Kazuo Mishima9, Makoto Honda30, Katsushi Tokunaga1.
Abstract
Etiology of narcolepsy-cataplexy involves multiple genetic and environmental factors. While the human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DRB1*15:01-DQB1*06:02 haplotype is strongly associated with narcolepsy, it is not sufficient for disease development. To identify additional, non-HLA susceptibility genes, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using Japanese samples. An initial sample set comprising 409 cases and 1562 controls was used for the GWAS of 525,196 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located outside the HLA region. An independent sample set comprising 240 cases and 869 controls was then genotyped at 37 SNPs identified in the GWAS. We found that narcolepsy was associated with a SNP in the promoter region of chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 1 (CCR1) (rs3181077, P=1.6×10(-5), odds ratio [OR]=1.86). This rs3181077 association was replicated with the independent sample set (P=0.032, OR=1.36). We measured mRNA levels of candidate genes in peripheral blood samples of 38 cases and 37 controls. CCR1 and CCR3 mRNA levels were significantly lower in patients than in healthy controls, and CCR1 mRNA levels were associated with rs3181077 genotypes. In vitro chemotaxis assays were also performed to measure monocyte migration. We observed that monocytes from carriers of the rs3181077 risk allele had lower migration indices with a CCR1 ligand. CCR1 and CCR3 are newly discovered susceptibility genes for narcolepsy. These results highlight the potential role of CCR genes in narcolepsy and support the hypothesis that patients with narcolepsy have impaired immune function.Entities:
Keywords: Chemokine receptor; Complex traits; Genome-wide association study; Microglia; Narcolepsy; Neuroinflammation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25986216 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2015.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Behav Immun ISSN: 0889-1591 Impact factor: 7.217