We performed a genome-wide association study of IgA nephropathy (IgAN), a major cause of kidney failure worldwide. Discovery was in 1,194 cases and 902 controls of Chinese Han ancestry, with targeted follow-up in Chinese and European cohorts comprising 1,950 cases and 1,920 controls. We identified three independent loci in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), a common deletion of CFHR1 and CFHR3 at Chr. 1q32 and a locus at Chr. 22q12 that each surpassed genome-wide significance (p-values for association between 1.59 × 10−26 and 4.84 × 10−9 and minor allele odds ratios of 0.63–0.80). These five loci explain 4–7% of the disease variance and up to a 10-fold variation in interindividual risk. Many of the IgAN–protective alleles impart increased risk of other autoimmune or infectious diseases, and IgAN risk allele frequencies closely parallel the variation in disease prevalence among Asian, European and African populations, suggesting complex selective pressures.
We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of IgA nephropathy (IgAN), the most common form of glomerulonephritis, with discovery and follow-up in 20,612 individuals of European and East Asian ancestry. We identified six novel genome-wide significant associations, four in ITGAM-ITGAX, VAV3 and CARD9 and two new independent signals at HLA-DQB1 and DEFA. We replicated the nine previously reported signals, including known SNPs in the HLA-DQB1 and DEFA loci. The cumulative burden of risk alleles is strongly associated with age at disease onset. Most loci are either directly associated with risk of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) or maintenance of the intestinal epithelial barrier and response to mucosal pathogens. The geo-spatial distribution of risk alleles is highly suggestive of multi-locus adaptation and the genetic risk correlates strongly with variation in local pathogens, particularly helminth diversity, suggesting a possible role for host-intestinal pathogen interactions in shaping the genetic landscape of IgAN.
Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) is the main complication after haematopoietic stem cells transplantation (HSCT) and acute forms (aGvHD) occur in 20-40% of cases even after donor (D) and recipient (R) HLA matching, apparently because of D/R minor histocompatibility antigen (mHA) mismatches and cytokine polymorphisms. The genotype of cytokines and mHA of 77 haematological R following HSCT from HLA identical siblings were determined to detect genetic polymorphisms correlated with GvHD. We analysed TNFA (-863 C/A, -857 C/T and G/A at positions -574, -376, -308, -244, -238), IL-10 (-1082 G/A, -819 C/A, -592 C/T), IL-1B (T/C +3953), IL-1RA (VNTR), HA-1 (H/R allele) and CD-31 (C/G at codon 125, A/G at codon 563). Allele frequencies were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and similar to those of 77 healthy controls. We observed positive correlations between a lower risk of clinically significant aGvHD and both the presence of -1082G -819C -592C IL-10 haplotype when both R and D are considered together and the absence of R IL-1RA allele 2. Furthermore, we observed an association between the absence of TNF-A -238 A allele and the risk of extensive chronic GvHD. mHA and cytokines genotyping would thus seem a valid source of information for the prior identification of recipients with a higher risk of aGvHD.
Age and gender are likely to evidence distinct immunological and inflammatory reactions leading to individual susceptibility to IgAN. Overall, a genetic predisposition to sporadic IgAN was found. We might hypothesize that C1GALT1 and TLR4 polymorphisms influence the risk to develop IgAN and proteinuria, respectively.
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