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Early-onset autoimmune vitiligo associated with an enhancer variant haplotype that upregulates class II HLA expression

Author

Listed:
  • Ying Jin

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine
    University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Genevieve H. L. Roberts

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Tracey M. Ferrara

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Songtao Ben

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Nanja Geel

    (Ghent University Hospital)

  • Albert Wolkerstorfer

    (Academic Medical Centre University of Amsterdam)

  • Khaled Ezzedine

    (Université Paris-Est Créteil)

  • Janet Siebert

    (CytoAnalytics)

  • Charles P. Neff

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Brent E. Palmer

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine)

  • Stephanie A. Santorico

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine
    University of Colorado)

  • Richard A. Spritz

    (University of Colorado School of Medicine
    University of Colorado School of Medicine)

Abstract

Vitiligo is an autoimmune disease in which melanocyte destruction causes skin depigmentation, with 49 loci known from previous GWAS. Aiming to define vitiligo subtypes, we discovered that age-of-onset is bimodal; one-third of cases have early onset (mean 10.3 years) and two-thirds later onset (mean 34.0 years). In the early-onset subgroup we found novel association with MHC class II region indel rs145954018, and independent association with the principal MHC class II locus from previous GWAS, represented by rs9271597; greatest association was with rs145954018del-rs9271597A haplotype (P = 2.40 × 10−86, OR = 8.10). Both rs145954018 and rs9271597 are located within lymphoid-specific enhancers, and the rs145954018del-rs9271597A haplotype is specifically associated with increased expression of HLA-DQB1 mRNA and HLA-DQ protein by monocytes and dendritic cells. Thus, for vitiligo, MHC regulatory variation confers extreme risk, more important than HLA coding variation. MHC regulatory variation may represent a significant component of genetic risk for other autoimmune diseases.

Suggested Citation

  • Ying Jin & Genevieve H. L. Roberts & Tracey M. Ferrara & Songtao Ben & Nanja Geel & Albert Wolkerstorfer & Khaled Ezzedine & Janet Siebert & Charles P. Neff & Brent E. Palmer & Stephanie A. Santorico , 2019. "Early-onset autoimmune vitiligo associated with an enhancer variant haplotype that upregulates class II HLA expression," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-10, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-08337-4
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-08337-4
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