| Literature DB >> 29379196 |
João Fadista1, Marie Lund2, Line Skotte2, Frank Geller2, Priyanka Nandakumar3, Sumantra Chatterjee3, Hans Matsson4, Anna Löf Granström4,5, Tomas Wester4,5, Perttu Salo6, Valtter Virtanen7, Lisbeth Carstensen2, Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm8, David Michael Hougaard8, Mikko Pakarinen7, Markus Perola6, Agneta Nordenskjöld4,5,9, Aravinda Chakravarti3, Mads Melbye2,10,11, Bjarke Feenstra2.
Abstract
Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) is a congenital disorder with a population incidence of ~1/5000 live births, defined by an absence of enteric ganglia along variable lengths of the colon. HSCR genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have found common associated variants at RET, SEMA3, and NRG1, but they still fail to explain all of its heritability. To enhance gene discovery, we performed a GWAS of 170 cases identified from the Danish nationwide pathology registry with 4717 controls, based on 6.2 million variants imputed from the haplotype reference consortium panel. We found a novel low-frequency variant (rs144432435), which, when conditioning on the lead RET single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), was of genome-wide significance in the discovery analysis. This conditional association signal was replicated in a Swedish HSCR cohort with discovery plus replication meta-analysis conditional odds ratio of 6.6 (P = 7.7 × 10-10; 322 cases and 4893 controls). The conditional signal was, however, not replicated in two HSCR cohorts from USA and Finland, leading to the hypothesis that rs144432435 tags a rare haplotype present in Denmark and Sweden. Using the genome-wide complex trait analysis method, we estimated the SNP heritability of HSCR to be 88%, close to estimates based on classical family studies. Moreover, by using Lasso (least absolute shrinkage and selection operator) regression we were able to construct a genetic HSCR predictor with a area under the receiver operator characteristics curve of 76% in an independent validation set. In conclusion, we combined the largest collection of sporadic Hirschsprung cases to date (586 cases) to further elucidate HSCR's genetic architecture.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29379196 PMCID: PMC5891499 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-017-0053-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246