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DLG5 variants contribute to Crohn disease risk in a Canadian population

✍ Scribed by William G. Newman; Xiangjun Gu; Richard F. Wintle; Xiangdong Liu; Mark van Oene; Christopher I. Amos; Katherine A. Siminovitch


Book ID
102259275
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
166 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


Communicated by Christopher G. Mathew

Variants in the gene encoding the DLG5 scaffolding protein have been reported to be associated with increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and particularly Crohn's disease (Crohn disease; CD). These findings have not been uniformly replicated in follow-up studies. In this study we genotyped a cohort of 402 Canadian CD and 179 ulcerative colitis (UC) patients and 537 healthy controls for three IBD/CD-associated DLG5 variants.

Our data reveal that the common DLG5 haplotype (A), which was previously considered protective for IBD, is associated with modest increases in risk for IBD (P 5 0.02) and CD (P 5 0.04). The effects of haplotype copy number on risk for IBD were minor, with the odds ratio (ORs) being 1.37 for the heterozygous risk genotype and 1.7 for the homozygous risk genotype. While we were unable to replicate the proposed association between the DLG5 c.113G4A variant and IBD, an association of IBD (P 5 0.02) and CD (P 5 0.04) with the rarer c.4136C4A variant was replicated in this cohort. These associations were restricted to the non-Jewish subjects in this cohort and were not detected in the Ashkenazi Jewish population studied here. Within the non-Jewish group, no associations were detected between the DLG5 variants and specific phenotypic features, such as site of disease, and there was no evidence of epistasis between DLG5 and any of the CD-associated CARD15 or SLC22A4/A5 gene variants. Together, the results indicate a role for DLG5 variants in IBD susceptibility and suggest that further studies are warranted to evaluate this role in different IBD populations and to determine the functional pathways that couple DLG5 variants to IBD. Hum Mutat 27(4), 353-358, 2006. r


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Background: Identification of Crohn's disease (CD)-associated genetic variants is key to understanding pathogenic pathways underlying disease susceptibility. Recent reports of an association between TNFSF15 variants and CD have been modestly replicated in European populations, suggesting heterogenei