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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study of maternal genetic effects and parent-of-origin effects on food allergy.

Liu X, Hong X, Tsai HJ et al.

29489655 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1630 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LX
Liu X
HX
Hong X
TH
Tsai HJ
MK
Mestan KK
SM
Shi M
KA
Kefi A
HK
Hao K
CQ
Chen Q
WG
Wang G
CD
Caruso D
GH
Geng H
GY
Gao Y
HJ
He J
KR
Kumar R
WH
Wang H
YY
Yu Y
BT
Bartell T
TX
Tan XD
SR
Schleimer RP
WD
Weeks DE
PJ
Pongracic JA
WX
Wang X
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Previous genetic studies of food allergy (FA) have mainly focused on inherited genotypic effects. The role of parental genotypic effects remains largely unexplored. Leveraging existing genome-wide association study (GWAS) data generated from the Chicago Food Allergy Study, we examined maternal genotypic and parent-of-origin (PO) effects using multinomial likelihood ratio tests in 588 complete and incomplete Caucasian FA trios. We identified 1 single nucleotide polymorphism with significant (P < 5×10) maternal effect on any FA (rs4235235), which is located in a noncoding RNA (LOC101927947) with unknown function. We also identified 3 suggestive (P < 5×10) loci with maternal genetic effects: 1 for any FA (rs976078, in a gene desert region on 13q31.1) and 2 for egg allergy (rs1343795 and rs4572450, in the ZNF652 gene, where genetic variants have been associated with atopic dermatitis). Three suggestive loci with PO effect were observed: 1 for peanut allergy (rs4896888 in the ADGB gene) and 2 for any FA in boys only (rs1036504 and rs2917750 in the IQCE gene). Findings from this family-based GWAS of FA provided some preliminary evidence on maternal genotypic or PO effects on FA. Additional family-based studies are needed to confirm our findings and gain new insight into maternal and paternal genetic contribution to FA.

482 European ancestry trios, 19 European ancestry father-child pairs, 59 European ancestry mother-child pairs, 28 European ancestry affected children

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1630
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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