Genome‐wide association study of tuberculosis in the western Chinese Han and Tibetan population

Author:

Bai Hao1ORCID,Song Mengyuan1,Lei Shikun2,Jiao Lin1,Hu Xuejiao3,Wu Tao1,Song Jiajia1,Liu Tangyuheng1,Peng Wu1,Zhao Zhenzhen1,Meng Zirui1,Ying Binwu1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu P. R. China

2. State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Center West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu P. R. China

3. Division of Laboratory Medicine Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital Guangdong Academy of Medical Sciences Guangzhou P. R. China

Abstract

AbstractTuberculosis (TB) remains a serious global public health threat. Accumulated evidence has demonstrated that human susceptibility to TB has a strong genetic basis. And different susceptibility single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) have been reported in different studies. To gain greater insight into the host susceptibility to TB, we perform a two‐stage genome‐wide association study to identify the susceptible loci of TB. In the discovery stage, 3116 (1532 TB patients and 1584 healthy controls) and 439 (211 TB patients and 228 healthy controls) individuals were genome‐wide genotyped from a western Chinese Han and Tibetan population, respectively. Based on the additive genetic model, we discovered 14 and three independent loci that had potential associations with TB susceptibility in the Chinese Han and Tibetan populations, respectively (p < 1 × 10−5). Furthermore, we conducted an imputation‐based meta‐analysis on another two East Asia cohorts to replicate our findings. We identified one independent locus harbored by the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II genes that was genome‐wide significantly associated with TB (lead SNP rs111875628 with a p‐value of 2.20 × 10−9). Our findings suggest a novel mechanism of the interaction with the HLA class II genes and reinforce the importance of the HLA class II alleles in response to TB.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Biochemistry (medical),Genetics (clinical),Computer Science Applications,Drug Discovery,Genetics,Oncology,Immunology and Allergy

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