Native American ancestry significantly contributes to neuromyelitis optica susceptibility in the admixed Mexican population

Author:

Romero-Hidalgo Sandra,Flores-Rivera José,Rivas-Alonso Verónica,Barquera Rodrigo,Villarreal-Molina María Teresa,Antuna-Puente Bárbara,Macias-Kauffer Luis Rodrigo,Villalobos-Comparán Marisela,Ortiz-Maldonado Jair,Yu Neng,Lebedeva Tatiana V.,Alosco Sharon M.,García-Rodríguez Juan Daniel,González-Torres Carolina,Rosas-Madrigal Sandra,Ordoñez Graciela,Guerrero-Camacho Jorge Luis,Treviño-Frenk Irene,Escamilla-Tilch Monica,García-Lechuga Maricela,Tovar-Méndez Víctor Hugo,Pacheco-Ubaldo Hanna,Acuña-Alonzo Victor,Bortolini Maria-Cátira,Gallo Carla,Bedoya Gabriel,Rothhammer Francisco,González-Jose Rolando,Ruiz-Linares Andrés,Canizales-Quinteros Samuel,Yunis Edmond,Granados Julio,Corona Teresa

Abstract

AbstractNeuromyelitis Optica (NMO) is an autoimmune disease with a higher prevalence in non-European populations. Because the Mexican population resulted from the admixture between mainly Native American and European populations, we used genome-wide microarray, HLA high-resolution typing and AQP4 gene sequencing data to analyze genetic ancestry and to seek genetic variants conferring NMO susceptibility in admixed Mexican patients. A total of 164 Mexican NMO patients and 1,208 controls were included. On average, NMO patients had a higher proportion of Native American ancestry than controls (68.1% vs 58.6%; p = 5 × 10–6). GWAS identified a HLA region associated with NMO, led by rs9272219 (OR = 2.48, P = 8 × 10–10). Class II HLA alleles HLA-DQB1*03:01, -DRB1*08:02, -DRB1*16:02, -DRB1*14:06 and -DQB1*04:02 showed the most significant associations with NMO risk. Local ancestry estimates suggest that all the NMO-associated alleles within the HLA region are of Native American origin. No novel or missense variants in the AQP4 gene were found in Mexican patients with NMO or multiple sclerosis. To our knowledge, this is the first study supporting the notion that Native American ancestry significantly contributes to NMO susceptibility in an admixed population, and is consistent with differences in NMO epidemiology in Mexico and Latin America.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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