Genome-wide association study in a high-risk isolate for multiple sclerosis reveals associated variants in STAT3 gene
Date Issued
2010-01-01
Author(s)
Jakkula, Eveliina
Leppä, Virpi
Sulonen, Anna-Maija
Varilo, Teppo
Kallio, Suvi
Kemppinen, Anu
Purcell, Shaun
Koivisto, Keijo
Tienari, Pentti
Sumelahti, Marja-Liisa
Elovaara, Irina
Pirttilä, Tuula
Reunanen, Mauri
Aromaa, Arpo
Oturai, Annette Bang
Søndergaard, Helle Bach
Harbo, Hanne F
Mero, Inger-Lise
Gabriel, Stacey B
Mirel, Daniel B
Hauser, Stephen L
Polman, Chris
De Jager, Philip L
Hafler, David A
Daly, Mark J
Palotie, Aarno
Saarela, Janna
Peltonen, Leena
DOI
10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.01.017
Abstract
Genetic risk for multiple sclerosis (MS) is thought to involve both common and rare risk alleles. Recent GWAS and subsequent meta-analysis have established the critical role of the HLA locus and identified new common variants associated to MS. These variants have small odds ratios (ORs) and explain only a fraction of the genetic risk. To expose potentially rare, high-impact alleles, we conducted a GWAS of 68 distantly related cases and 136 controls from a high-risk internal isolate of Finland with increased prevalence and familial occurrence of MS. The top 27 loci with p < 10(-4) were tested in 711 cases and 1029 controls from Finland, and the top two findings were validated in 3859 cases and 9110 controls from more heterogeneous populations. SNP (rs744166) within the STAT3 gene was associated to MS (p = 2.75 x 10(-10), OR 0.87, confidence interval 0.83-0.91). The protective haplotype for MS in STAT3 is a risk allele for Crohn disease, implying that STAT3 represents a shared risk locus for at least two autoimmune diseases. This study also demonstrates the potential of special isolated populations in search for variants contributing to complex traits.