Genetic control of CCL24, POR, and IL23R contributes to the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis
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Published:2020-08-21
Issue:1
Volume:3
Page:
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ISSN:2399-3642
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Container-title:Communications Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Commun Biol
Author:
Meguro Akira, Ishihara Mami, Petrek MartinORCID, Yamamoto KenORCID, Takeuchi Masaki, Mrazek Frantisek, Kolek Vitezslav, Benicka Alzbeta, Yamane Takahiro, Shibuya Etsuko, Yoshino Atsushi, Isomoto Akiko, Ota Masao, Yatsu Keisuke, Shijubo Noriharu, Nagai Sonoko, Yamaguchi Etsuro, Yamaguchi Tetsuo, Namba Kenichi, Kaburaki Toshikatsu, Takase HiroshiORCID, Morimoto Shin-ichiro, Hori JunkoORCID, Kono Keiko, Goto Hiroshi, Suda Takafumi, Ikushima Soichiro, Ando Yasutaka, Takenaka Shinobu, Takeuchi Masaru, Yuasa Takenosuke, Sugisaki Katsunori, Ohguro Nobuyuki, Hiraoka Miki, Kitaichi Nobuyoshi, Sugiyama Yukihiko, Horita Nobuyuki, Asukata Yuri, Kawagoe Tatsukata, Kimura Ikuko, Ishido Mizuho, Inoko Hidetoshi, Mochizuki Manabu, Ohno Shigeaki, Bahram SeiamakORCID, Remmers Elaine F., Kastner Daniel L., Mizuki NobuhisaORCID
Abstract
AbstractSarcoidosis is a genetically complex systemic inflammatory disease that affects multiple organs. We present a GWAS of a Japanese cohort (700 sarcoidosis cases and 886 controls) with replication in independent samples from Japan (931 cases and 1,042 controls) and the Czech Republic (265 cases and 264 controls). We identified three loci outside the HLA complex, CCL24, STYXL1-SRRM3, and C1orf141-IL23R, which showed genome-wide significant associations (P < 5.0 × 10−8) with sarcoidosis; CCL24 and STYXL1-SRRM3 were novel. The disease-risk alleles in CCL24 and IL23R were associated with reduced CCL24 and IL23R expression, respectively. The disease-risk allele in STYXL1-SRRM3 was associated with elevated POR expression. These results suggest that genetic control of CCL24, POR, and IL23R expression contribute to the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis. We speculate that the CCL24 risk allele might be involved in a polarized Th1 response in sarcoidosis, and that POR and IL23R risk alleles may lead to diminished host defense against sarcoidosis pathogens.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)
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