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Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes

Celiac Disease (CD) is a polygenic trait, and HLA genes explain less than half of the genetic variation. Through large GWAs more than 40 associated non-HLA genes were identified, but they give a small contribution to the heritability of the disease. The aim of this study is to improve the estimate o...

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Autores principales: Izzo, Valentina, Pinelli, Michele, Tinto, Nadia, Esposito, Maria Valeria, Cola, Arturo, Sperandeo, Maria Pia, Tucci, Francesca, Cocozza, Sergio, Greco, Luigi, Sacchetti, Lucia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3210127/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22087237
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026920
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author Izzo, Valentina
Pinelli, Michele
Tinto, Nadia
Esposito, Maria Valeria
Cola, Arturo
Sperandeo, Maria Pia
Tucci, Francesca
Cocozza, Sergio
Greco, Luigi
Sacchetti, Lucia
author_facet Izzo, Valentina
Pinelli, Michele
Tinto, Nadia
Esposito, Maria Valeria
Cola, Arturo
Sperandeo, Maria Pia
Tucci, Francesca
Cocozza, Sergio
Greco, Luigi
Sacchetti, Lucia
author_sort Izzo, Valentina
collection PubMed
description Celiac Disease (CD) is a polygenic trait, and HLA genes explain less than half of the genetic variation. Through large GWAs more than 40 associated non-HLA genes were identified, but they give a small contribution to the heritability of the disease. The aim of this study is to improve the estimate of the CD risk in siblings, by adding to HLA a small set of non-HLA genes. One-hundred fifty-seven Italian families with a confirmed CD case and at least one other sib and both parents were recruited. Among 249 sibs, 29 developed CD in a 6 year follow-up period. All individuals were typed for HLA and 10 SNPs in non-HLA genes: CCR1/CCR3 (rs6441961), IL12A/SCHIP1 and IL12A (rs17810546 and rs9811792), TAGAP (rs1738074), RGS1 (rs2816316), LPP (rs1464510), OLIG3 (rs2327832), REL (rs842647), IL2/IL21 (rs6822844), SH2B3 (rs3184504). Three associated SNPs (in LPP, REL, and RGS1 genes) were identified through the Transmission Disequilibrium Test and a Bayesian approach was used to assign a score (BS) to each detected HLA+SNPs genotype combination. We then classified CD sibs as at low or at high risk if their BS was respectively < or ≥ median BS value within each HLA risk group. A larger number (72%) of CD sibs showed a BS ≥ the median value and had a more than two fold higher OR than CD sibs with a BS value < the median (O.R = 2.53, p = 0.047). Our HLA+SNPs genotype classification, showed both a higher predictive negative value (95% vs 91%) and diagnostic sensitivity (79% vs 45%) than the HLA only. In conclusion, the estimate of the CD risk by HLA+SNPs approach, even if not applicable to prevention, could be a precious tool to improve the prediction of the disease in a cohort of first degree relatives, particularly in the low HLA risk groups.
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spelling pubmed-32101272011-11-15 Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes Izzo, Valentina Pinelli, Michele Tinto, Nadia Esposito, Maria Valeria Cola, Arturo Sperandeo, Maria Pia Tucci, Francesca Cocozza, Sergio Greco, Luigi Sacchetti, Lucia PLoS One Research Article Celiac Disease (CD) is a polygenic trait, and HLA genes explain less than half of the genetic variation. Through large GWAs more than 40 associated non-HLA genes were identified, but they give a small contribution to the heritability of the disease. The aim of this study is to improve the estimate of the CD risk in siblings, by adding to HLA a small set of non-HLA genes. One-hundred fifty-seven Italian families with a confirmed CD case and at least one other sib and both parents were recruited. Among 249 sibs, 29 developed CD in a 6 year follow-up period. All individuals were typed for HLA and 10 SNPs in non-HLA genes: CCR1/CCR3 (rs6441961), IL12A/SCHIP1 and IL12A (rs17810546 and rs9811792), TAGAP (rs1738074), RGS1 (rs2816316), LPP (rs1464510), OLIG3 (rs2327832), REL (rs842647), IL2/IL21 (rs6822844), SH2B3 (rs3184504). Three associated SNPs (in LPP, REL, and RGS1 genes) were identified through the Transmission Disequilibrium Test and a Bayesian approach was used to assign a score (BS) to each detected HLA+SNPs genotype combination. We then classified CD sibs as at low or at high risk if their BS was respectively < or ≥ median BS value within each HLA risk group. A larger number (72%) of CD sibs showed a BS ≥ the median value and had a more than two fold higher OR than CD sibs with a BS value < the median (O.R = 2.53, p = 0.047). Our HLA+SNPs genotype classification, showed both a higher predictive negative value (95% vs 91%) and diagnostic sensitivity (79% vs 45%) than the HLA only. In conclusion, the estimate of the CD risk by HLA+SNPs approach, even if not applicable to prevention, could be a precious tool to improve the prediction of the disease in a cohort of first degree relatives, particularly in the low HLA risk groups. Public Library of Science 2011-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3210127/ /pubmed/22087237 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026920 Text en Izzo et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Izzo, Valentina
Pinelli, Michele
Tinto, Nadia
Esposito, Maria Valeria
Cola, Arturo
Sperandeo, Maria Pia
Tucci, Francesca
Cocozza, Sergio
Greco, Luigi
Sacchetti, Lucia
Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title_full Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title_fullStr Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title_full_unstemmed Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title_short Improving the Estimation of Celiac Disease Sibling Risk by Non-HLA Genes
title_sort improving the estimation of celiac disease sibling risk by non-hla genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3210127/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22087237
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026920
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