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GWAS Study

GWAS of thyroid dysgenesis identifies a risk locus at 2q33.3 linked to regulation of Wnt signaling.

Narumi S, Opitz R, Nagasaki K et al.

35535691 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
12941 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NS
Narumi S
OR
Opitz R
NK
Nagasaki K
MK
Muroya K
AY
Asakura Y
AM
Adachi M
AK
Abe K
SC
Sugisawa C
KP
Kühnen P
IT
Ishii T
NM
Nöthen MM
KH
Krude H
HT
Hasegawa T
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Congenital hypothyroidism due to thyroid dysgenesis (TD), presented as thyroid aplasia, hypoplasia or ectopia, is one of the most prevalent rare diseases with an isolated organ malformation. The pathogenesis of TD is largely unknown, although a genetic predisposition has been suggested. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) with 142 Japanese TD cases and 8380 controls and found a significant locus at 2q33.3 (top single nucleotide polymorphism, rs9789446: P = 4.4 × 10-12), which was replicated in a German patient cohort (P = 0.0056). A subgroup analysis showed that rs9789446 confers a risk for thyroid aplasia (per allele odds ratio = 3.17) and ectopia (3.12) but not for hypoplasia. Comprehensive epigenomic characterization of the 72-kb disease-associated region revealed that it was enriched for active enhancer signatures in human thyroid. Analysis of chromosome conformation capture data showed long-range chromatin interactions of this region with promoters of two genes, FZD5 and CCNYL1, mediating Wnt signaling. Moreover, rs9789446 was found to be a thyroid-specific quantitative trait locus, adding further evidence for a cis-regulatory function of this region in thyroid tissue. Specifically, because the risk rs9789446 allele is associated with increased thyroidal expression of FDZ5 and CCNYL1 and given the recent demonstration of perturbed early thyroid development following overactivation of Wnt signaling in zebrafish embryos, an enhanced Wnt signaling in risk allele carriers provides a biologically plausible TD mechanism. In conclusion, our work found the first risk locus for TD, exemplifying that in rare diseases with relatively low biological complexity, GWAS may provide mechanistic insights even with a small sample size.

142 Japanese ancestry cases, 8,380 Japanese ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

12941
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
80 German ancestry cases, 4,339 German ancestry controls
Replication Participants
East Asian, European
Ancestry
Japan, Germany
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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