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GWAS Study

Common risk variants in NPHS1 and TNFSF15 are associated with childhood steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome.

Jia X, Yamamura T, Gbadegesin R et al.

32554042 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
64929 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JX
Jia X
YT
Yamamura T
GR
Gbadegesin R
MM
McNulty MT
SK
Song K
NC
Nagano C
HY
Hitomi Y
LD
Lee D
AY
Aiba Y
KS
Khor SS
UK
Ueno K
KY
Kawai Y
NM
Nagasaki M
NE
Noiri E
HT
Horinouchi T
KH
Kaito H
HR
Hamada R
OT
Okamoto T
KK
Kamei K
KY
Kaku Y
FR
Fujimaru R
TR
Tanaka R
SY
Shima Y
BJ
Baek J
KH
Kang HG
HI
Ha IS
HK
Han KH
YE
Yang EM
AA
Abeyagunawardena A
LB
Lane B
CM
Chryst-Stangl M
EC
Esezobor C
SA
Solarin A
DC
Dossier C
DG
Deschênes G
VM
Vivarelli M
DH
Debiec H
IK
Ishikura K
MM
Matsuo M
NK
Nozu K
RP
Ronco P
CH
Cheong HI
SM
Sampson MG
TK
Tokunaga K
IK
Iijima K
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

To understand the genetics of steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome (SSNS), we conducted a genome-wide association study in 987 childhood SSNS patients and 3,206 healthy controls with Japanese ancestry. Beyond known associations in the HLA-DR/DQ region, common variants in NPHS1-KIRREL2 (rs56117924, P=4.94E-20, odds ratio (OR) =1.90) and TNFSF15 (rs6478109, P=2.54E-8, OR=0.72) regions achieved genome-wide significance and were replicated in Korean, South Asian and African populations. Trans-ethnic meta-analyses including Japanese, Korean, South Asian, African, European, Hispanic and Maghrebian populations confirmed the significant associations of variants in NPHS1-KIRREL2 (Pmeta=6.71E-28, OR=1.88) and TNFSF15 (Pmeta=5.40E-11, OR=1.33) loci. Analysis of the NPHS1 risk alleles with glomerular NPHS1 mRNA expression from the same person revealed allele specific expression with significantly lower expression of the transcript derived from the risk haplotype (Wilcox test p=9.3E-4). Because rare pathogenic variants in NPHS1 cause congenital nephrotic syndrome of the Finnish type (CNSF), the present study provides further evidence that variation along the allele frequency spectrum in the same gene can cause or contribute to both a rare monogenic disease (CNSF) and a more complex, polygenic disease (SSNS).

987 Japanese ancestry cases, 3,206 Japanese ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

64929
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
249 Korean ancestry cases, 181 South Asian ancestry cases, 207 African ancestry cases, 307 European ancestry cases, 27 Hispanic cases, 85 Maghrebian ancestry cases, 3805 Korean ancestry controls, 8,255 South Asian ancestry controls, 5,657 African ancestry controls, 35,913 European ancestry controls, 5,789 Hispanic controls, 261 Moroccan ancestry controls
Replication Participants
African unspecified, East Asian, South Asian, European, Hispanic or Latin American, Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian)
Ancestry
Nigeria, France, U.S., Japan, Sri Lanka, Italy, Spain, Republic of Korea
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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