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Nature Research, Nature Communications, 1(9), 2018

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04365-8

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IBD risk loci are enriched in multigenic regulatory modules encompassing putative causative genes

Journal article published in 2018 by Yukihide Momozawa, A. E. Vander Meulen-De Jong, Julia Dmitrieva, C. J. Van Der Woude, Emilie Théâtre, Valerie Deffontaine, Souad Rahmouni, Ann-Stephan Gori, Benoit Charloteaux, C. Janneke van der Woude, Francois Crins, Cecile Oury, Ilya Altukhov, Elisa Docampo, Dmitry Alexeev and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

AbstractGWAS have identified >200 risk loci for Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). The majority of disease associations are known to be driven by regulatory variants. To identify the putative causative genes that are perturbed by these variants, we generate a large transcriptome data set (nine disease-relevant cell types) and identify 23,650 cis-eQTL. We show that these are determined by ∼9720 regulatory modules, of which ∼3000 operate in multiple tissues and ∼970 on multiple genes. We identify regulatory modules that drive the disease association for 63 of the 200 risk loci, and show that these are enriched in multigenic modules. Based on these analyses, we resequence 45 of the corresponding 100 candidate genes in 6600 Crohn disease (CD) cases and 5500 controls, and show with burden tests that they include likely causative genes. Our analyses indicate that ≥10-fold larger sample sizes will be required to demonstrate the causality of individual genes using this approach.