Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a complex hematologic malignancy with multiple disease subgroups defined by somatic mutations and heterogeneous outcomes. Although genome-wide association studies (GWAS Show more
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a complex hematologic malignancy with multiple disease subgroups defined by somatic mutations and heterogeneous outcomes. Although genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a small number of common genetic variants influencing AML risk, the heritable component of this disease outside of familial susceptibility remains largely undefined. Here, we perform a meta-analysis of 4 published GWAS plus 2 new GWAS, totaling 4710 AML cases and 12 938 controls. We identify a new genome-wide significant risk locus for pan-AML at 2p23.3 (rs4665765; P = 1.35 × 10-8; EFR3B, POMC, DNMT3A, and DNAJC27), which also significantly associates with patient survival (P = 6.09 × 10-3). Our analysis also identifies 3 new genome-wide significant risk loci for disease subgroups, including AML with deletions of chromosome 5 and/or 7 at 1q23.3 (rs12078864; P = 7.0 × 10-10; DUSP23) and cytogenetically complex AML at 2q33.3 (rs12988876; P = 3.28 × 10-8; PARD3B) and 2p21 (rs79918355; P = 1.60 × 10-9; EPCAM). We also investigated loci previously associated with the risk of clonal hematopoiesis (CH) or CH of indeterminate potential and identified several variants associated with the risk of AML. Our results further inform on AML etiology and demonstrate the existence of disease subgroup specific risk loci. Show less
Cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are long-term complications of chronic liver disease (CLD). In this large multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of all-cause cirrhosis (35,481 cases Show more
Cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are long-term complications of chronic liver disease (CLD). In this large multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of all-cause cirrhosis (35,481 cases, 2.36M controls) and HCC (6,680 cases, 1.76M controls), we identified 27 loci associated with cirrhosis (10 novel) and 11 with HCC (three novel). Three novel cirrhosis loci were replicated in independent cohorts (e.g. Show less
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a genetically complex disease of immune dysregulation. This study sought to gain further insight into the genetic risk mechanisms of RA by conducting an expression quantit Show more
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a genetically complex disease of immune dysregulation. This study sought to gain further insight into the genetic risk mechanisms of RA by conducting an expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) analysis of confirmed genetic risk loci in CD4+ T cells and B cells from carefully phenotyped patients with early arthritis who were naive to therapeutic immunomodulation. RNA and DNA were isolated from purified B and/or CD4+ T cells obtained from the peripheral blood of 344 patients with early arthritis. Genotyping and global gene expression measurements were carried out using Illumina BeadChip microarrays. Variants in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with non-HLA RA single-nucleotide polymorphisms (defined as r Genes subject to cis-eQTL effects that were common to both CD4+ and B lymphocytes at RA risk loci were FADS1, FADS2, BLK, FCRL3, ORMDL3, PPIL3, and GSDMB. In contrast, those acting on METTL21B, JAZF1, IKZF3, and PADI4 were unique to CD4+ lymphocytes, with the latter candidate risk gene being identified for the first time in this cell subset. B lymphocyte-specific eQTLs for SYNGR1 and CD83 were also found. At the 8p23 BLK-FAM167A locus, adjacent genes were subject to eQTLs whose activity differed markedly between cell types; in particular, the FAM167A effect displayed striking B lymphocyte specificity. No trans-eQTLs approached experiment-wide significance, and linear modeling did not identify a significant influence of biologic covariates on cis-eQTL effect sizes. These findings further refine the understanding of candidate causal genes in RA pathogenesis, thus providing an important platform from which downstream functional studies, directed toward particular cell types, may be prioritized. Show less
The cytoskeleton not only provides structure, it is an active component of cell function, and in several neurodegenerative disorders, there is evidence of cytoskeletal collapse. Cytoskeletal proteins Show more
The cytoskeleton not only provides structure, it is an active component of cell function, and in several neurodegenerative disorders, there is evidence of cytoskeletal collapse. Cytoskeletal proteins have been specifically implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), where degeneration of dopaminergic (DA) neurons is the hallmark, but in which many factors may determine the resilience of DA neurons during aging and stress. Here we report that the human Microtubule Actin Cross-linking Factor 1 gene (MACF1), a downstream target of PD biochemical pathways, was significantly associated with PD in 713 nuclear families. A significant allelic association between PD and rs12118033, with P = 0.0098, was observed, and a P < 0.03 was observed in the association analysis by both a trend test and an allelic test. We further observed that it is the MACF1b isoform, not the MACF1a isoform, which is expressed in DA neurons from six human postmortem brains. In a Caenorhabditis elegans system, used to explore the effect of altered MACF1b on neurons, knockdown or knockout of the MACF1b orthologue vab-10 resulted in the selective loss of DA neurons, which validated MACF1's risk candidacy in PD. These findings strongly suggest that MACF1b may contribute to the genetic etiology and mechanistic causation of PD. Show less