| Literature DB >> 29020033 |
Jinfa Dou1,2, Huimin Guo1,2, Fang Cheng1,2, Hequn Huang1,2, Liying Fu1,2, Longnian Li3, Chao Yang1,2, Lei Ye1,2, Leilei Wen1,2, Yuyan Cheng1,2, Lili Tang1,2, Caihong Zhu1,2, Zhengwei Zhu1,2, Wenjun Wang1,2, Yujun Sheng1,2, Zaixing Wang1,2, Shengxiu Liu1,2, Xing Fan1,2, Xianbo Zuo1,2, Fusheng Zhou1,2, Liangdan Sun1,2, Xiaodong Zheng1,2, Xuejun Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Researchers have learned that nearly all conditions and diseases have a genetic component. With the benefit of technological advances, many single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been found to be associated with the risk of complex disorders by using genome wide association studies (GWASs). Disease-associated SNPs are sometimes shared by healthy controls and cannot clearly distinguish affected individuals from unaffected ones. The combined effects of multiple independent SNPs contribute to the disease process, but revealing the relationship between genotype and phenotype based on the combinations remains a great challenge. In this study, by considering the disease prevalence rate, we conducted an exhaustive process to identify whether a genotype combination pattern would have a decisive effect on complex disorders. Based on genotype data for 68 reported SNPs in 8,372 psoriasis patients and 8,510 healthy controls, we found that putative causal genotype combination patterns (CGCPs) were only present in psoriasis patients, not in healthy subjects. These results suggested that psoriasis might be contributed by combined genotypes, complementing the traditional modest susceptibility of a single variant in a single gene for a complex disease. This work is the first systematic study to analyze genotype combinations based on the reported susceptibility genes, considering each individual among the cases and controls from the Chinese population, and could potentially advance disease-gene mapping and precision medicine due to the causality relationship between the candidate CGCPs and complex diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29020033 PMCID: PMC5636117 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The summary information of samples.
| Case | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| No. | 8310 | 7243 |
| Gender | ||
| Male (%) | 5008(60.26) | 3682(50.84) |
| Female (%) | 3302(39.74) | 3561(49.16) |
| Age | ||
| Mean (s.d.) | 35.03(14.75) | 31.17 (13.41) |
| Age of onset | ||
| Mean (s.d.) | 27.14(13.37) | - |
a, the number of subjects with demographic and medical information.
s.d., standard deviation. Mean, the mean value of age/age onset.
Fig 1The 51 SNPs and alleles associated with psoriasis in the autosomal chromosome.
The outmost lines with different colors represent chromosomes labled by 1–22, and ribbon colors in chromosomes assigned to Giemsa stain based on the color scheme of the UCSC genome browser represent chromosome bands.
The toppest candidate CGCP results for three, four and five SNPs and corresponding number of psoriasis patients.
| SNPs | Candidate CGCPs | No. of patients | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs10794648 | rs2233278 | rs280519 | CCGGGG | 16 | ||
| rs367569 | rs3751385 | rs758739 | rs999556 | CCTTGGAA | 19 | |
| rs10852936 | rs2233278 | rs4561177 | rs6590334 | rs7552167 | TCGCAATCAG | 24 |
Abbreviations: SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; CGCP, causal genotype combination pattern.
Fig 2Distribution of permuted number of patients with the candidate CGCP in every 1000 cases.
The arrow shows the observed number of individuals with the toppest candidate CGCP for three (A), four (B) and five (C) SNPs in the 1000 cases.
Fig 3Frequency of genotype combination patterns for three, four and five SNPs in inverse analysis.
Fig 4Protein–protein interaction network of the genes at the loci of the 5 SNPs for the top CGCP.
Text in red, pink, blue, green and black represents genes at the loci of the 5 SNPs rs10852936, rs2233278, rs4561177, rs6590334 and rs7552167, respectively.