Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE; OMIM 1 152700) is a genetically
complex autoimmune disease. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have
identified more than 50 loci as robustly associated with the disease in single
ancestries, but genome-wide transancestral studies have not been conducted. We
combined three GWAS data sets from Chinese (1,659 cases and 3,398 controls) and
European (4,036 cases and 6,959 controls) populations. A meta-analysis of these
studies showed that over half of the published SLE genetic associations are
present in both populations. A replication study in Chinese (3,043 cases and
5,074 controls) and European (2,643 cases and 9,032 controls) subjects found ten
previously unreported SLE loci. Our study provides further evidence that the
majority of genetic risk polymorphisms for SLE are contained within the same
regions across both populations. Furthermore, a comparison of risk allele
frequencies and genetic risk scores suggested that the increased prevalence of
SLE in non-Europeans (including Asians) has a genetic basis.
ObjectiveSystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), an autoimmune disorder, has been associated with nearly 100 susceptibility loci. Nevertheless, these loci only partially explain SLE heritability and their putative causal variants are rarely prioritised, which make challenging to elucidate disease biology. To detect new SLE loci and causal variants, we performed the largest genome-wide meta-analysis for SLE in East Asian populations.MethodsWe newly genotyped 10 029 SLE cases and 180 167 controls and subsequently meta-analysed them jointly with 3348 SLE cases and 14 826 controls from published studies in East Asians. We further applied a Bayesian statistical approach to localise the putative causal variants for SLE associations.ResultsWe identified 113 genetic regions including 46 novel loci at genome-wide significance (p<5×10−8). Conditional analysis detected 233 association signals within these loci, which suggest widespread allelic heterogeneity. We detected genome-wide associations at six new missense variants. Bayesian statistical fine-mapping analysis prioritised the putative causal variants to a small set of variants (95% credible set size ≤10) for 28 association signals. We identified 110 putative causal variants with posterior probabilities ≥0.1 for 57 SLE loci, among which we prioritised 10 most likely putative causal variants (posterior probability ≥0.8). Linkage disequilibrium score regression detected genetic correlations for SLE with albumin/globulin ratio (rg=−0.242) and non-albumin protein (rg=0.238).ConclusionThis study reiterates the power of large-scale genome-wide meta-analysis for novel genetic discovery. These findings shed light on genetic and biological understandings of SLE.
This study identified three novel coding variants and four new susceptibility gene regions for SLE. The results provide insights into the biological mechanism of SLE.
Our analyses showed that genes contributed to the pathogenesis of psoriasis by activating risk pathways with components abnormality in expression. We identified five potentially pathogenic genes for psoriasis that may serve as important biomarkers for the diagnosis and treatment.
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