Literature DB >> 29293537

Gene-level association analysis of systemic sclerosis: A comparison of African-Americans and White populations.

Olga Y Gorlova1, Yafang Li1, Ivan Gorlov1, Jun Ying2, Wei V Chen3, Shervin Assassi2, John D Reveille2, Frank C Arnett2, Xiaodong Zhou2, Lara Bossini-Castillo4, Elena Lopez-Isac5, Marialbert Acosta-Herrera5, Peter K Gregersen6, Annette T Lee6, Virginia D Steen7, Barri J Fessler8, Dinesh Khanna9, Elena Schiopu9, Richard M Silver10, Jerry A Molitor11, Daniel E Furst12,13,14, Suzanne Kafaja12, Robert W Simms15, Robert A Lafyatis16, Patricia Carreira17, Carmen Pilar Simeon18, Ivan Castellvi19, Emma Beltran20, Norberto Ortego21, Christopher I Amos1, Javier Martin5, Maureen D Mayes2.   

Abstract

Gene-level analysis of ImmunoChip or genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data has not been previously reported for systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma). The objective of this study was to analyze genetic susceptibility loci in SSc at the gene level and to determine if the detected associations were shared in African-American and White populations, using data from ImmunoChip and GWAS genotyping studies. The White sample included 1833 cases and 3466 controls (956 cases and 2741 controls from the US and 877 cases and 725 controls from Spain) and the African American sample, 291 cases and 260 controls. In both Whites and African Americans, we performed a gene-level analysis that integrates association statistics in a gene possibly harboring multiple SNPs with weak effect on disease risk, using Versatile Gene-based Association Study (VEGAS) software. The SNP-level analysis was performed using PLINK v.1.07. We identified 4 novel candidate genes (STAT1, FCGR2C, NIPSNAP3B, and SCT) significantly associated and 4 genes (SERBP1, PINX1, TMEM175 and EXOC2) suggestively associated with SSc in the gene level analysis in White patients. As an exploratory analysis we compared the results on Whites with those from African Americans. Of previously established susceptibility genes identified in Whites, only TNFAIP3 was significant at the nominal level (p = 6.13x10-3) in African Americans in the gene-level analysis of the ImmunoChip data. Among the top suggestive novel genes identified in Whites based on the ImmunoChip data, FCGR2C and PINX1 were only nominally significant in African Americans (p = 0.016 and p = 0.028, respectively), while among the top novel genes identified in the gene-level analysis in African Americans, UNC5C (p = 5.57x10-4) and CLEC16A (p = 0.0463) were also nominally significant in Whites. We also present the gene-level analysis of SSc clinical and autoantibody phenotypes among Whites. Our findings need to be validated by independent studies, particularly due to the limited sample size of African Americans.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29293537      PMCID: PMC5749683          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189498

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma) [MIM 181750] is an autoimmune disease characterized by three key features: (1) fibrosis of skin and internal organs, (2) a vasculopathy, and (3) autoantibody production. It is a multiorgan system disease with considerable phenotypic heterogeneity, resulting in a broad spectrum of disease severity. Several genome-wide, ImmunoChip, and follow-up association studies were conducted to identify SNPs associated with SSc risk [1-8]. All published studies implemented SNP-level analysis meaning that each SNP was analyzed separately and those with genome wide level of statistical significance were deemed risk associated. SNP-level analysis is effective for identification of SNPs with strong individual effects, however, it is underpowered to detect genes carrying multiple SNPs in the same gene of small or medium effect size [9-11]. In the latter case, gene-level analysis can be beneficial because it will detect genes with multiple small effect size SNPs as significant even if these genes do not harbor any individual SNPs significant at the genome-wide level. However, a gene-level analysis has never been applied to SSc. In this study we performed a gene-level analysis focusing on the data generated by the ImmunoChip platform. We compared results from the gene-level analysis with the results generated by traditional SNP-level analysis. We also performed a gene-level analysis of ImmunoChip and genome-wide association study (GWAS) data on of African-American SSc patients. Although based on a relatively small group of patients, this study represents the first report of genetic analysis of African Americans with SSc. The results of the gene-level analysis of SSc clinical phenotypes (limited SSc (lcSSc) and diffuse SSc (dcSSc)) as well as autoantibody subsets (anti-centromere autoantibodies (ACA) and anti-DNA topoisomerase I (ATA) autoantibodies) among Whites are also presented.

Materials and methods

The study has been approved by the Institutional Review Boards of the participating US institutions, namely Boston University; Georgetown University; Medical University of South Carolina; University of Alabama, Birmingham; University of California Los Angeles; University of Michigan; University of Minnesota; University of Washington; University of Pittsburgh; University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College; and ethics committees of the participating foreign institutions, namely Institute of Parasitology and Biomedicine López-Neyra, IPBLN-CSIC, Granada, Spain; University of Florence, Florence, Italy; Hospital Universitario, Madrid, Spain; Valle de Hebrón Hospital, Barcelona, Spain; Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain; Hospital Universitario y Politécnico La Fe, Valencia, Spain; University Hospital San Cecilio, Granada, Spain. All clinical investigation has been conducted according to the principles expressed in the Declaration of Helsinki. Written informed consent has been obtained from the participants. Race of the study participants was self-reported, and we used principal component analyses to remove race outliers as described below. Details on the White population, genotyping and quality control can be found in our previously published manuscript [7]. The White sample included 956 cases and 2741 controls from the US and 877 cases and 725 controls from Spain, after exclusion of individuals based on quality control (QC) (low call rates, non-European ancestry, or relatedness). There were 1087 (59%) White patients with lcSSc, 574 (31%) with dcSSc, 671 (37%) ACA-positive (ACA+), and 347 (19%) ATA+ patients (not all patients could be classified into two distinct phenotypes or had either ACA or ATA antibodies). The African American sample, after quality control measures, included 291 cases (56 men and 235 women) and 260 controls (72 men and 188 women). In line with [12], the distribution of clinical phenotypes and autoantibody subsets in the African American patient population was markedly different from that in Whites. There were 82 (28%) patients with lcSSc, 201 (69%) with dcSSc, 21 (7%) ACA+, and 69 (24%) ATA+ among the African American cases (as with Whites, not all patients could be classified into two distinct phenotypes or had either ACA or ATA antibodies two patients were not tested for ACA and four for ATA). ImmunoChip analysis: Genotyping was done by Illumina Infinium single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) microarray–ImmunoChip. Genotype calling was done using the Illumina iScan System and the Genotyping Module (v.1.8.4) of the GenomeStudio Data Analysis software. We applied the following criteria for QC: (1) individuals with call rate <90% were excluded, (2) markers with call rates ≤ 90% were excluded, and (3) markers with allele distributions deviating from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) in controls (p < 1× 10−5) were also excluded. A total 126,270 markers (101,692 of them with a MAF > 0.1%) passed QC and were included in the analysis. The same ImmunoChip platform was used for White and African American populations. The genotyping rate was 0.988 in the African American sample while the genotyping rate was 0.998 among Whites. GWAS analysis: We also performed a genome-wide genotyping of both African Americans and Whites. African Americans were genotyped on the Illumina Omni2.5 BeadChip that features ~2.5 million markers capturing variants down to MAF 2.5% and covers, in particular, African genetic diversity. The same exact individuals that were successfully genotyped on ImmunoChip were successfully genotyped on this platform. The genotyping rate after QC was 0.993 in African American population. The quality control for African Americans also included principal component analysis as implemented in SNP & Variation Suite v.7 (Golden Helix). The first three principal components were derived for each individual from the African American sample along with HapMap Phase 2 samples as reference populations. Individuals deviating for more than 6 SDs from the African ancestry cluster centroid were discarded from further analysis. We also excluded individuals deviating more than 4 standard deviations from the cluster centroid. Finally, we excluded duplicate and closely related samples (PIHAT ≥ 0.5). The genome wide genotyping of the White populations has been described previously in Radstake et al (2010) [3]. In brief, Hap550K-BeadChip was used for US Whites and Illumina HumanCNV370K BeadChip in Spanish Whites. For the SNP-level analysis the association statistics was computed via logistic regression including sex as a covariate for each dataset. For the White samples, meta-analysis combining odds ratios (OR) and standard errors (SE) of individual datasets (US and Spanish, so that the controls in each set were from the same country as cases) was performed by means of the inverse-variance method under the assumption of a fixed effect as implemented in PLINK v.1.07. [13]. For the gene-level analysis we used Versatile Gene-based Association Study (VEGAS) [14]. We used VEGAS because it outperforms similar methods by sensitivity and specificity from simulation studies [15]. VEGAS can be applied to the data generated by any GWAS designs, including family-based GWAS, meta-analyses of GWAS and DNA-pooling-based GWAS. The test uses information from the complete set of markers within a gene. To account for linkage disequilibrium between markers VEGAS uses simulations from the multivariate normal distribution. VEGAS assigns SNPs to autosomal genes according to positions on the UCSC Genome Browser hg18 assembly. In order to capture regulatory regions and SNPs in LD, the gene boundaries are defined as ±50 kb of 5’ and 3’ UTRs. VEGAS assigned SNPs genotyped by ImmunoChip to 11,501 genes. Assuming independence of the gene level tests, the threshold for statistical significance in the analysis of ImmunoChip in Whites was set to be 4.35x10-6, and at 2.8x10-6 for the analysis of GWAS data [14]. However, since this threshold is likely to be conservative given the overlap between genes, we report findings with p-values <10−5. Also, since the sample size for African Americans was limited, for this population we present findings with the p-value below 10−3, acknowledging that this is a study limitation and that the analysis is exploratory and is in need for further validation. We use the term “nominal significance” to denote p-values in the range of 0.05 to 10−3, interpreting them as weak evidence of association. We excluded HLA region from the analysis because it is universally significant. We used PathwayStudio [16] to build a pathway of known and novel SSc risk-associated genes. The PathwayStudio uses text mining to identify reported interactions between genes and build a network based on the known interactions.

Results

ImmunoChip analysis

Table 1 shows results from the gene-level and SNP-level analyses for 19 non-HLA genes previously shown to be associated with SSc in Whites [1–8, 17, 18]. Out of 19 known SSc genes, all except for SCHIP1, IRF8, and CD247 were nominally significant in the gene-level analysis in Whites. IRF5, STAT4, and TNPO3 were significant in both the SNP- and gene-level analyses among Whites.
Table 1

Results of the gene-level analyses for known genes associated with risk of SSc in Whites and African Americans, based on ImmunoChip.

WhitesAfricanAmericans
GeneChrNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP P-valueNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP P-value
STAT421132.00E-09rs10174238*4.65E-131080.105rs1551443*0.0106
TNPO371023.00E-08rs17340351**2.39E-101050.314rs1495461§0.0574
IRF57492.00E-06rs12534421*7.42E-10530.211rs14954610.0574
TNIP151244.90E-05rs10463312*4.87E-061560.189rs2277940§0.00742
IL12RB21695.40E-05rs2201584*1.29E-06840.921rs11209045**0.0418
BLK81761.43E-04rs2409781*2.99E-081720.552rs11250139**0.0244
ITGAM16531.96E-04rs11436835.70E-05670.337rs4561481**0.00771
IL12RB119420.001144rs2305743*7.23E-05480.215rs426132*0.0733
TNFAIP36450.00145rs892999**0.0103690.00613rs10223636*0.00203
IL12A31100.00248rs4679867*8.79E-051410.741rs4679867*0.0508
TYK219600.00363rs23042561.61E-04630.758rs8108709*0.1514
ATG56540.0076rs11758079**0.00276620.272rs4946731**0.0083
CSK1580.0129rs6495122§1.96E-0590.787rs8033381*0.299
JAZF17960.0325rs6971086*5.64E-041120.844rs3823946*0.0122
PXK31800.0397rs7626140*0.006991870.755rs9870786*0.0177
DNASE1L33840.0464rs4681786**3.09E-04930.597rs9843169**0.0177
CD247150.0821rs2056626*0.0054180.467rs10918695*0.211
IRF816240.0986rs10863202**0.0165280.518rs11642456**0.129
SCHIP13810.174rs1675497*0.00108770.449rs17753641*0.0543

*Intronic SNP

**intergenic SNP

†coding SNP

§3’ downstream SNP

‡5’ upstream SNP

*Intronic SNP **intergenic SNP †coding SNP §3’ downstream SNP ‡5’ upstream SNP In the gene-level analysis of clinical phenotypes (S1 and S2 Tables) and antibody subsets (S3 and S4 Tables), STAT4 was significant for lcSSc and ACA+ patients and TNPO3 in ATA+ patients. Of the 19 genes examined, only TNFAIP3 was nominally significant in African Americans in the gene-level analysis. Table 2 shows non-HLA genes with the p-values below 10−5 in the gene-level analysis for Whites (excluding those already established in Whites), with the addition of p-values for these genes in African Americans. The genes with the p-values below 4.35x10-6 are shown in bold.
Table 2

Comparison of novel candidate genes (at p<4.35x10-6 indicated in bold) and suggestive genes (4.35x10-6

WhitesAfricanAmericans
GeneChrNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP p-valueNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP p-value
STAT1260<1.00E-06rs11893432*4.01E-11580.581rs16833197*0.0195
FCGR2C1263.00E-06rs4554699**2.72E-08240.0158rs17411858**0.00497
NIPSNAP3B934.00E-06rs3780540*7.79E-0440.551rs3780540*0.31
SCT11344.00E-06rs4963128*6.72E-05520.691rs10902178*0.0456
SERBP11486.00E-06rs3790569*5.61E-05610.855rs11807749**0.0682
PINX182008.00E-06rs17152571*1.46E-052100.0283rs17152345*6.61E-04
EXOC26158.00E-06rs908026**2.79E-05210.382rs7761186*0.0396

*Intronic SNP

**intergenic SNP

*Intronic SNP **intergenic SNP One gene out of four significant at this level in Whites, namely FCGR2C, was also nominally significant in African Americans. PINX1, which was only borderline significant in Whites, also showed a nominal significance in African Americans. Additionally, nominally significant SNPs where observed in STAT1 and SCT genes and in the borderline significant EXOC2 in the analysis of African Americans (Table 2), even though these genes did not reach significance in the gene-level analysis in that population. The top genes identified for clinical phenotypes and autoantibody subsets are shown in S1–S4 Tables, in the left portion for the gene-level analyses based on ImmunoChip. FCGR2C, STAT1, and FCGR3B were significant in lcSSc, although FCGR2C and FCGR3B shared the most significant SNP rs455499 and the gene-level p-value for FCGR2C was more significant (S1 Table). In dcSSc, three genes (IL34, ABBA-1, and VAC14) were identified as significant, although they shared the most significant SNP rs11640251 and IL34 had the best p-value in the gene-level analysis (S2 Table). In ACA+ patients, in addition to STAT4, six genes (FCGR2C, SRCAP, PHKG2, LOC90835, RNF40, and FCGR3B) reached significance in the ImmunoChip-based gene-level analysis, but the middle four genes shared the most significant SNP rs7188927 and SRCAP showed the best gene-level p-value (S3 Table), and FCGR2C and FCGR3B also shared the most significant SNP rs455499. Of these two genes, FCGR2C showed a more significant gene-level p-value like in the case of the lcSSc phenotype. Among ATA+ patients, in addition to TNPO3, C16orf68, P2RX1, C3orf25, IFT122, and MBD4 reached significance in the gene-level analysis, with the last three genes sharing the same most significant SNP rs2307293 (S4 Table). In the reverse approach we selected top non-HLA genes most significant in African Americans (p<10−3) based on the gene level analysis (Table 3; 13 genes but only 9 independent regions, due to the gene overlap).
Table 3

Genes most significant (at p<10−3) in African Americans in the gene-level analysis and the results for these genes in Whites, based on ImmunoChip.

AfricanAmericansWhites
GeneChrNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP p-valueNSNPsP-valueTop SNPTop SNP p-value
SCN4B1141.20E-05rs868344ǁ4.04E-0340.544rs671111§0.291
SCN2B1141.50E-05rs868344§4.04E-0330.687rs671111§0.291
MRPL281616.20E-05rs7439616.72E-0510.0863rs3848368**0.0856
TMEM81616.20E-05rs743961*6.72E-0510.105rs3848368**0.0856
NME41616.90E-05rs7439616.72E-0510.0869rs3848368**0.0856
DECR21617.50E-05rs7439616.72E-0510.0836rs3848368**0.0856
UNC5C481.22E-04rs7697199*6.20E-0565.57E-04rs17381177*7.84E-04
RAB11FIP31622.96E-04rs7439616.72E-0510.358rs3785301*0.338
PLCG21654.97E-04rs4325546*3.15E-0380.601rs3936112*0.0874
CLEC16A163295.29E-04rs1646066**5.39E-043550.0463rs16957854*0.00169
ABCB47245.77E-04rs17149601*2.16E-04170.271rs17149512ǁ0.083
TCERG1517.61E-04rs10056189**7.31E-0410.135rs10056189**0.171
PHF199748.09E-04rs1008382*1.32E-04610.721rs388040*0.0426

ǁ 3’UTR SNP

§3’ downstream

‡5’ upstream

*intronic SNP

**intergenic SNP

ǁ 3’UTR SNP §3’ downstream ‡5’ upstream *intronic SNP **intergenic SNP Of these genes, only UNC5C (p = 5.57x10-4) and CLEC16A (p = 0.0463) were nominally significant in the gene-level analysis in Whites, and both these genes and PHF19 harbored a nominally significant SNP in Whites (Table 3). Among the 63 top genes (27 independent regions) selected based on SNP level analysis in African Americans (S5 Table; genes with best SNP p-value<10−3 in African Americans), 16 genes (12 independent regions) were also nominally significant in Whites at the gene level and 42 genes harbored at least nominally significant SNPs in Whites (25 different SNPs due to assignment of some SNPs to several genes at once). Since under the null hypothesis the expected number of nominally significant SNPs in Whites is ~1 (27x0.05 = 1.3), the results suggest some overlap in genetic susceptibility loci for SSc between Whites and African Americans.

GWAS data analysis

We performed similar analyses also based on the GWAS genotyping which was, however, performed on different platforms in Whites and African Americans, and this made the results less comparable. The results are presented in S6–S11 Tables. In brief, among the genes previously identified in Whites, in addition to TNFAIP3, ATG5 showed a nominal significance in the gene-level analysis in African Americans, potentially due to a denser coverage of this gene (81 vs 62 SNPs) on the 2.5 M Omni platform than on ImmunoChip (S6 Table). Beyond the genes previously established as associated with SSc in Whites, only one gene, TMEM175, showed a borderline significant association in the gene-level analysis in Whites (p = 3.0x10-6) in GWAS. Its most significant SNP rs2290405 was shared with two other genes (SLC26A1 and DGKQ; S7 Table). The analysis of the corresponding genes in the GWAS data in African Americans did not detect gene-level significance for these genes but TMEM175 harbored a nominally significant SNP rs11946340 unlike the other two neighboring genes. In the analysis of clinical phenotypes and autoantibody subsets, out of already established SSc susceptibility genes, IRF5, TNPO3, and IRF8 were significant in lcSSc patients. There were also seven newly identified genes, of which four (DGKQ, IDUA, TMEM175, and SLC26A1) shared the same most significant SNP rs11724804; of these, DGKQ showed the best gene-level p-value. IRF4, CCDC104, and TLR10 were also significant. Notably all these genes were at least nominally significant in the ImmunoChip-based gene-level analysis, except for CCDC104 which is not on ImmunoChip (S1 Table). In dcSSc, in addition to IRF5 and TNPO3, CPSF4 and ATP5J2 showed significant p-values in the gene-level analysis; they shared the same most significant SNP rs10235235, and CPSF4 was more significant in the gene-level analysis. Except for IRF5 and TNPO3, no gene reached statistical significance in the ACA+ subset in the GWAS-based gene-level analysis. In the ATA+ subset, TLR10 and TLR1, sharing the same most significant SNP rs10024216, were significant (both reached only nominal significance in the ImmunoChip-based gene-level analysis) (S4 Table). In the reverse analysis, considering the top genes identified in the gene-level analysis in African Americans (12 non-HLA genes but 11 regions due to the gene overlap, S8 Table), none of the corresponding genes was even nominally significant in Whites but 6 genes harbored nominally significant SNPs. Among the genes identified in the GWAS SNP-level analysis on African Americans as harboring most significant SNPs (p<10−3; 488 such genes but only 308 independent regions because of the gene overlap), 311 genes (255 independent regions) also harbored at least nominally significant SNPs in Whites. Eight genes (SLC2A13, NRG3, SLC10A7, MKL1, DZIP1L, C8orf58, KIAA1967, and HDAC1; seven independent regions, C8orf58 and KIAA1967 representing the same region) were nominally significant in both Whites and African Americans in the gene-level analysis. The results are presented in S9 Table (a). Five SNPs—rs2994241 in C10orf27/ADAMTS14, rs6025407 in BMP7, rs6796265 in OSBPL10, rs7734699 in MRPS27, and rs6075784 in STK35 –were nominally significant in both Whites and African Americans. These five SNPs are marked in green in S9 Table (a), and their risk effects are shown in S9 Table (b). We also catalogued genes identified in African Americans either in GWAS or ImmunoChip gene-level analysis (S10 Table), or by the top SNP p-value (with p<10−3) (S11 Table). In the few cases where the same SNP was top in both GWAS and ImmunoChip analyses, a slight p-value variation is explained by the QC procedures that eliminated different number of individuals from the ImmunoChip versus GWAS analysis. Genes for SSc and other autoimmune diseases are enriched by the immune response genes [19-21]. One can expect, therefore, that SSc genes will be often involved in direct interactions. We used PathwayStudio to build an interaction network of known as well as 6 novel candidate genes (both significant and suggestive) (Table 3) identified by the gene-level analysis. Such networks may be useful by providing guidance to explore biological mechanisms underlying SSc risk. We found that two suggestive candidates, namely EXOC2 and PINX1, interact with known genes associated with risk of SSc. The EXOC2 protein has been shown to bind LST1 [22], and PINX1 and STAT1 show protein/protein interaction [23] (S1 Fig).

Discussion

We identified 4 novel candidate genes (STAT1, FCGR2C, NIPSNAP3B, and SCT) significantly associated and 4 genes (SERBP1, PINX1, TMEM175 and EXOC2) suggestively associated with SSc in a gene level analysis in Whites. Some of these genes have been shown to be directly involved in immune response. For example, FCGR2C encodes a member of low-affinity immunoglobulin gamma Fc receptors. FCGR2C is found on the surface of many immune response cells. The gene encodes a transmembrane glycoprotein involved in phagocytosis and clearing of immune complexes. A suggestive novel gene, SERBP1, encodes a B-cell antigen, shown to predict anti-tumor immune response [24]. Another suggestive gene, EXOC2, is associated with innate immunity and has been shown to play a role in susceptibility to Crohn’s disease [25]. We note that the suggestive signal at EXOC2 overlaps with the signal at IRF4 previously described in the cross-disease meta-GWAS of SSc and rheumatoid arthritis [26], which points at the importance of this region in autoimmune conditions. This gene harbored a SNP rs908026 with a relatively strong statistical evidence for risk association (P = 2.8x10-5). Risk-associated SNPs were observed in other gene-level candidates as well. For example, rs11893432 (STAT1 gene; p = 4.01x10-11) and rs4554699 (FCGR2C gene; p = 2.7x10-8) were significant at the GWAS level. The most significant SNPs in other novel candidates were: rs2290405 in TMEM175 (p = 1.82x10-6), rs17152571 in PINX1 gene (P = 1.5x10-5), rs3790569 in SERBP1 gene (P = 5.6x10-5), rs4963128 in SCT gene (P = 6.7x10-5), and rs3780540 for NIPSNAP3B gene (P = 7.8x10-5). We admit that a further revalidation in an independent study of SSc in Whites is necessary. Out of the 19 genes that were previously identified as harboring SSc susceptibility SNPs in Whites, only TNFAIP3 was nominally significant in the gene-level analysis in African Americans. Previously, we showed that SNPs of TNFAIP3 had a strong association with expression of matrix metalloproteinase 1 and 3 in fibroblasts of ethnically diverse patients in response to silica particle stimulation [27]. Several factors could have contributed to the absence of an association in African Americans for genes found in Whites. First, the distribution of clinical phenotypes is markedly different in the two populations, with a considerably higher proportion of the diffuse phenotype among African Americans (69%) as compared to Whites (31%). Our previous publication [6] shows differences in the genetic architecture of SSc clinical phenotypes. Thus clinical phenotype-specific analyses by ethnic group would be most meaningful, because they would allow for more accurate racial comparisons. Unfortunately, the limited number of African American participants precluded the phenotype or autoantibody subset analyses in the current study. Second, the power of the analysis in the African Americans was limited because of the sample size. Moreover, the power of the analysis depends not solely on the sample size but also on the risk allele frequency. S9 Table (b) exemplifies that there is a considerable variation in the allele frequencies between the two populations, which could have contributed to the inter-ethnic differences. Third, even if the effects of causal SNPs are similar across ethnicities, GWAS-identified tagging SNP alleles can be in the opposite linkage phases in two given ethnic groups. This will result in the opposite effects of the tagging SNPs identified as significant in both African Americans and Whites, and the data in S9 Table (b) suggest exactly that: some SNPs identified as nominally significant have very similar frequencies but the opposite direction of the effect in African Americans and Whites. It is also possible that the causal SNPs are different in different ethnicities although the susceptibility genes are the same. A gene-level analysis of dense genotyping data, such as ours, should be able to capture the susceptibility genes even in case of the ethnic heterogeneity for causal alleles, unless a given ethnicity lacks causal variants in a potential susceptibility gene, in which case the gene will not be associated with disease in that ethnic group. The genes listed in Table 2, except for NIPSNAP3B, are densely SNP-genotyped in both Whites and African Americans. Thus it is not very likely that an individual SNP being poly- versus monomorphic has led to the loss of an association. For NIPSNAP3B, the top SNP in both populations was the same, rs3780540, and the MAF was actually higher in African Americans (0.116) than in Whites (0.0179), yet it was only significant in Whites. An interaction network built using Pathway Studio detected a large number of interactions between genes associated with SSc risk. Genes with the largest number of interactions include ITGAM, AIF1, STAT1, IL12RB2; these genes form hubs of the network and are likely to be master genes in biological control of SSc risk. Two suggestive candidates, EXOC2 and PINX1, are also part of this network. As mentioned before, limitations of this study are (1) a relatively small sample size for African Americans, which prevents us from drawing any definite conclusion concerning the hitherto unresolved issue whether the same genes/SNPs influence SSc risk in different ethnic groups, and (2) the absence of independent validation cohorts. We acknowledge, therefore, that our analyses should be considered exploratory. Nevertheless, we carried out such analyses because the data are unique and their analysis may be important for the understanding of the role of ethnicity in the genetic architecture of SSc. The results of our exploratory analysis might suggest that there exist both trans-racial and race-specific susceptibility loci for SSc, but further validation by independent studies, in particular a properly powered SSc GWAS in African Americans that allows subset analyses, is necessary to answer this question.

Conclusions

A gene-level analysis focusing on the data generated by the ImmunoChip platform was performed on White and African American SSc patients. This study represents the first report of genetic analysis of African Americans with SSc. The gene-level analysis identified four novel candidate genes (STAT1, FCGR2C, NIPSNAP3B, and SCT) significantly associated with SSc in Whites. As an exploratory analysis we compared the results in Whites with those generated from African Americans. There was weak evidence of existence of SSc susceptibility loci that showed effects in both Whites and African Americans. Our findings need to be validated by independent studies, particularly due to the limited sample size of African Americans. The clinical phenotype and autoantibody subset analyses for Whites are also presented, but future studies should compare the phenotype- and autoantibody-stratified analyses in Whites and African Americans.

A catalogue of genes identified for limited SSc in Whites as harboring SNPs at p<10−5 in either ImmunoChip or GWAS data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

A catalogue of genes identified for diffuse SSc in Whites as harboring SNPs at p<10−5 in either ImmunoChip or GWAS data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

A catalogue of genes identified for ACA-positive SSc in Whites as harboring SNPs at p<10−5 in either ImmunoChip or GWAS data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

A catalogue of genes identified for ATA-positive SSc in Whites as harboring SNPs at p<10−5 in either ImmunoChip or GWAS data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

The top genes selected based on SNP level analysis (p<10−3) of ImmunoChip data in African Americans.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

The comparison of results of the gene-level analysis for Whites and African Americans for the genes previously shown as associated with SSc risk in Whites, based on GWAS data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

Top novel genes identified by the gene-level analysis of GWAS data in Whites, with the comparative results from GWAS in African Americans.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

The top genes identified in the gene-level analysis of GWAS data in African Americans, with the comparative results in Whites.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file. (a) The genes identified in the GWAS of African Americans as harboring most significant SNPs (p<10−3), with the genes at least nominally significant at the gene level in both African Americans and Whites shown at the top.(b). SNPs nominally significant in both African Americans and Whites. (XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

A catalogue of genes identified in African Americans' gene-level analysis of either GWAS or ImmunoChip data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

A catalogue of genes identified in African Americans as harboring SNPs at p<10−3 in either GWAS or ImmunoChip data.

(XLSX) Click here for additional data file.

The interaction network for known and novel candidate genes detected by the gene-level analysis.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.
  27 in total

1.  Pathway studio--the analysis and navigation of molecular networks.

Authors:  Alexander Nikitin; Sergei Egorov; Nikolai Daraselia; Ilya Mazo
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2003-11-01       Impact factor: 6.937

2.  A GWAS follow-up study reveals the association of the IL12RB2 gene with systemic sclerosis in Caucasian populations.

Authors:  Lara Bossini-Castillo; Jose-Ezequiel Martin; Jasper Broen; Olga Gorlova; Carmen P Simeón; Lorenzo Beretta; Madelon C Vonk; Jose Luis Callejas; Ivan Castellví; Patricia Carreira; Francisco José García-Hernández; Mónica Fernández Castro; Marieke J H Coenen; Gabriela Riemekasten; Torsten Witte; Nicolas Hunzelmann; Alexander Kreuter; Jörg H W Distler; Bobby P Koeleman; Alexandre E Voskuyl; Annemie J Schuerwegh; Øyvind Palm; Roger Hesselstrand; Annika Nordin; Paolo Airó; Claudio Lunardi; Raffaella Scorza; Paul Shiels; Jacob M van Laar; Ariane Herrick; Jane Worthington; Christopher Denton; Filemon K Tan; Frank C Arnett; Sandeep K Agarwal; Shervin Assassi; Carmen Fonseca; Maureen D Mayes; Timothy R D J Radstake; Javier Martin
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2011-11-10       Impact factor: 6.150

3.  Identification of an Association of TNFAIP3 Polymorphisms With Matrix Metalloproteinase Expression in Fibroblasts in an Integrative Study of Systemic Sclerosis-Associated Genetic and Environmental Factors.

Authors:  Peng Wei; Yang Yang; Xinjian Guo; Nainan Hei; Syeling Lai; Shervin Assassi; Mengyuan Liu; Filemon Tan; Xiaodong Zhou
Journal:  Arthritis Rheumatol       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 10.995

4.  Power in GWAS: lifting the curse of the clinical cut-off.

Authors:  S van der Sluis; D Posthuma; M G Nivard; M Verhage; C V Dolan
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2012-05-22       Impact factor: 15.992

5.  Genome-wide association study of systemic sclerosis identifies CD247 as a new susceptibility locus.

Authors:  Timothy R D J Radstake; Olga Gorlova; Blanca Rueda; Jose-Ezequiel Martin; Behrooz Z Alizadeh; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Marieke J Coenen; Madelon C Vonk; Alexandre E Voskuyl; Annemie J Schuerwegh; Jasper C Broen; Piet L C M van Riel; Ruben van 't Slot; Annet Italiaander; Roel A Ophoff; Gabriela Riemekasten; Nico Hunzelmann; Carmen P Simeon; Norberto Ortego-Centeno; Miguel A González-Gay; María F González-Escribano; Paolo Airo; Jaap van Laar; Ariane Herrick; Jane Worthington; Roger Hesselstrand; Vanessa Smith; Filip de Keyser; Fredric Houssiau; Meng May Chee; Rajan Madhok; Paul Shiels; Rene Westhovens; Alexander Kreuter; Hans Kiener; Elfride de Baere; Torsten Witte; Leonid Padykov; Lars Klareskog; Lorenzo Beretta; Rafaella Scorza; Benedicte A Lie; Anna-Maria Hoffmann-Vold; Patricia Carreira; John Varga; Monique Hinchcliff; Peter K Gregersen; Annette T Lee; Jun Ying; Younghun Han; Shih-Feng Weng; Christopher I Amos; Fredrick M Wigley; Laura Hummers; J Lee Nelson; Sandeep K Agarwal; Shervin Assassi; Pravitt Gourh; Filemon K Tan; Bobby P C Koeleman; Frank C Arnett; Javier Martin; Maureen D Mayes
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2010-04-11       Impact factor: 38.330

6.  Fucosyltransferase 2 (FUT2) non-secretor status is associated with Crohn's disease.

Authors:  Dermot P B McGovern; Michelle R Jones; Kent D Taylor; Kristin Marciante; Xiaofei Yan; Marla Dubinsky; Andy Ippoliti; Eric Vasiliauskas; Dror Berel; Carrie Derkowski; Deb Dutridge; Phil Fleshner; David Q Shih; Gil Melmed; Emebet Mengesha; Lily King; Sheila Pressman; Talin Haritunians; Xiuqing Guo; Stephan R Targan; Jerome I Rotter
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2010-06-22       Impact factor: 6.150

7.  LST1 promotes the assembly of a molecular machinery responsible for tunneling nanotube formation.

Authors:  Christian Schiller; Kalliope N Diakopoulos; Ina Rohwedder; Elisabeth Kremmer; Christine von Toerne; Marius Ueffing; Ulrich H Weidle; Hiroshi Ohno; Elisabeth H Weiss
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2012-12-13       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 8.  The genetics of systemic sclerosis.

Authors:  Sandeep K Agarwal
Journal:  Discov Med       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.970

Review 9.  Race and association with disease manifestations and mortality in scleroderma: a 20-year experience at the Johns Hopkins Scleroderma Center and review of the literature.

Authors:  Allan C Gelber; Rebecca L Manno; Ami A Shah; Adrianne Woods; Elizabeth N Le; Francesco Boin; Laura K Hummers; Fredrick M Wigley
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 1.889

10.  Systemic Sclerosis is a Complex Disease Associated Mainly with Immune Regulatory and Inflammatory Genes.

Authors:  Jingxiao Jin; Chou Chou; Maria Lima; Danielle Zhou; Xiaodong Zhou
Journal:  Open Rheumatol J       Date:  2014-09-29
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  9 in total

Review 1.  Towards a Better Classification and Novel Therapies Based on the Genetics of Systemic Sclerosis.

Authors:  Marialbert Acosta-Herrera; Elena López-Isac; Javier Martín
Journal:  Curr Rheumatol Rep       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 4.592

2.  Germline Features Associated with Immune Infiltration in Solid Tumors.

Authors:  Sahar Shahamatdar; Meng Xiao He; Matthew A Reyna; Alexander Gusev; Saud H AlDubayan; Eliezer M Van Allen; Sohini Ramachandran
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 9.423

Review 3.  Genetics of systemic sclerosis.

Authors:  Yuki Ishikawa; Chikashi Terao
Journal:  J Scleroderma Relat Disord       Date:  2020-04-19

Review 4.  Genetic Variation in Low-To-Medium-Affinity Fcγ Receptors: Functional Consequences, Disease Associations, and Opportunities for Personalized Medicine.

Authors:  Sietse Q Nagelkerke; David E Schmidt; Masja de Haas; Taco W Kuijpers
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2019-10-03       Impact factor: 7.561

5.  The Liability Threshold Model for Predicting the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Multi-Cohort Study of Korean Adults.

Authors:  Eun Pyo Hong; Seong Gu Heo; Ji Wan Park
Journal:  Metabolites       Date:  2020-12-24

6.  Inducible knockout of Clec16a in mice results in sensory neurodegeneration.

Authors:  Steven S Scherer; Hakon Hakonarson; Heather S Hain; Rahul Pandey; Marina Bakay; Bryan P Strenkowski; Danielle Harrington; Micah Romer; William W Motley; Jian Li; Eunjoo Lancaster; Lindsay Roth; Judith B Grinspan
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-04-29       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 7.  Updates on genetics in systemic sclerosis.

Authors:  Yuko Ota; Masataka Kuwana
Journal:  Inflamm Regen       Date:  2021-06-15

8.  Association of the PINX1 Variant rs6984094, Which Lengthens Telomeres, with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Susceptibility in Chinese Populations.

Authors:  Yuan-Yuan Qi; Xin-Ran Liu; Ying-Xin He; Min Zhou; Xiang-Hui Ning; Ya-Ling Zhai; Xiao-Xue Zhang; Xiao-Yang Wang; Ya-Fei Zhao; Yan Cui; Zhan-Zheng Zhao
Journal:  J Immunol Res       Date:  2021-07-13       Impact factor: 4.818

9.  The identification of gene signatures in patients with extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma from a pair of twins.

Authors:  Yang Wang; Huaicheng Tan; Ting Yu; Xuelei Ma; Xiaoxuan Chen; Fangqi Jing; Liqun Zou; Huashan Shi
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2021-12-06       Impact factor: 4.430

  9 in total

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