@article{be66b1b36c3b485db138c36d8d29a3ad,
title = "Genetic analysis of the pathogenic molecular sub-phenotype interferon-alpha identifies multiple novel loci involved in systemic lupus erythematosus",
abstract = "Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disorder characterized by inflammation of multiple organ systems and dysregulated interferon responses. SLE is both genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous, greatly reducing the power of case-control studies in SLE. Elevated circulating interferon-alpha (IFN-α) is a stable, heritable trait in SLE, which has been implicated in primary disease pathogenesis. About 40-50\% of patients have high IFN-α, and high levels correspond with clinical differences. To study genetic heterogeneity in SLE, we performed a case-case study comparing patients with high vs low IFN-α in over 1550 SLE cases, including genome-wide association study and replication cohorts. In meta-analysis, the top associations in European ancestry were protein kinase, cyclic GMP-dependent, type I (PRKG1) rs7897633 (P Meta =2.75 × 10-8) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) rs1049564 (P Meta =1.24 × 10-7). We also found evidence for cross-ancestral background associations with the ankyrin repeat domain 44 (ANKRD44) and pleckstrin homology domain containing, family F member 2 gene (PLEKHF2) loci. These loci have not been previously identified in case-control SLE genetic studies. Bioinformatic analyses implicated these loci functionally in dendritic cells and natural killer cells, both of which are involved in IFN-α production in SLE. As case-control studies of heterogeneous diseases reach a limit of feasibility with respect to subject number and detectable effect size, the study of informative pathogenic sub-phenotypes becomes an attractive strategy for genetic discovery in complex disease.",
author = "Kariuki, \{S. N.\} and Y. Ghodke-Puranik and Dorschner, \{J. M.\} and Chrabot, \{B. S.\} and Kelly, \{J. A.\} and Tsao, \{B. P.\} and Kimberly, \{R. P.\} and Alarc{\'o}n-Riquelme, \{M. E.\} and Jacob, \{C. O.\} and Criswell, \{L. A.\} and Sivils, \{K. L.\} and Langefeld, \{C. D.\} and Harley, \{J. B.\} and Skol, \{A. D.\} and Niewold, \{T. B.\}",
note = "Funding Information: Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institutes of Health under award numbers: R01 AR060861 (NTB), UL1 RR024999 (NTB), K08 AI083790 (NTB), LRP AI071651 (NTB), N01 AR62277 (HJB), R3724717 (HJB), AR042460 (HJB), P01 AI083194 (HJB), P20 RR020143 (HJB), R01 DE018209 (HJB), R01 AR043274 (SKL), R01 CA141700 (ARME), RC1 AR058621 (ARME), RO1 AR43814 (TBP), P60 AR053308 (CLA), R01 AR44804 (CLA) and UL1 TR000004. Additional support was granted from the HHMI Gilliam Fellowship for Advanced Study (KSN), Alliance for Lupus Research (NTB, SKL, CLA and JCO), Merit Award from the US Department of Veterans Affairs (HJB), Lupus Research Institute (NTB), the Arthritis National Research Foundation Eng Tan Scholar Award (NTB), and the Lupus Foundation of Minnesota (NTB and SKL), Mayo Clinic Foundation (NTB), Kirkland Scholar Award (CLA) and the Wake Forest University Health Sciences Center for Public Health Genomics (LCD). We also thank the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (PI12/02558), partly supported with FEDER funds from the EU and the RNP Network BIOLUPUS financed by the European Science Foundation. The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.",
year = "2015",
month = jan,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1038/gene.2014.57",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "15--23",
journal = "Genes and Immunity",
issn = "1466-4879",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "1",
}