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Abstract Number: 2199

Analysis Of The MHC Region In a Large Cohort Of Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis Cases Identifies Independent Effects At HLA-DRB1

Anne Hinks1, Joanna Cobb1, Buhm Han2,3, Miranda C. Marion4, Marc Sudman5, Paul Martin1, John F. Bohnsack6, Lucy R. Wedderburn7, Johannes Peter Haas8, Paul de Bakker2, Carl D. Langefeld9, Soumya Raychaudhuri2, Sampath Prahalad10, Susan D. Thompson11 and Wendy Thomson1, 1Arthritis Research UK Epidemiology Unit, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, Institute of Inflammation and Repair, The University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom, 2Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 3Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA, 4Department of Biostatistical Sciences, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, NC, 5Department of Rheumatology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, 6Pediatriacs, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 7Rheumatology Unit, Arthritis Research UK Centre for Adolescent Rheumatology at University College London, Great Ormond Street Hospital and UCLH, University College London, London, United Kingdom, 8German Centre for Rheumatology in Children and Young People, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, 9Center for Public Health Genomics and Department of Biostatistical Sciences, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, 10Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, 11Division and Center for Autoimmune Disease Genomics and Etiology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH

Meeting: 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and major histocompatibility complex (MHC)

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Session Information

Title: Pediatric Rheumatology - Pathogenesis and Genetics

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose:

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common arthritic disease of childhood and is caused by a combination of genes and environment. In the last few years great advances have been made in dissecting the genetic basis of JIA with now 17 confirmed susceptibility loci identified. One of these loci, the MHC region, has been established for many years but the complexity and the broad linkage disequilibrium (LD) across the region has rendered fine-mapping associations challenging. Novel imputation strategies can now be utilized to impute HLA classical alleles and amino acids across the region. The aim of this work was to gain a greater understanding of the associations across the HLA region in the 2 most common subtypes of JIA, oligoarthritis and rheumatoid factor-negative polyarthritis.

Methods:

Using the dense genotype data obtained from the analysis of the custom-designed Illumina ImmunoChip in 2816 JIA cases and 13056 controls, we imputed HLA classical alleles (2-digit and 4-digit resolution) and amino acids across the MHC region (Chr6:29-34Mb) using the SNP2HLA algorithm and a large reference panel of 5225 individuals from the T1DGC consortium. We performed logistic regression for all markers across the region and tested all amino acids in HLA-DRB1 performing an omnibus test of amino acid residues for each position. Conditional analysis to identify potential independent effects was performed.

Results:

We observed high correlation (0.99) between imputed and classically typed actual allele frequencies for HLA-DRB1 2-digit and 4-digit alleles for a subset of JIA cases (n=394). The most significant association across the HLA region was for the phenylalanine residue at amino acid 67 of HLA-DRB1, OR=3.03, p=1 x 10-179. The omnibus test for all amino acids across HLA-DRB1 showed most significant association at HLA-DRB1 amino acid 13 and conditioning on all residues at amino acid 13 found significant association remaining at HLA-DRB1 amino acid 67, suggesting two independent effects in HLA-DRB1.

Conclusion:

Analysis of the MHC region in the largest cohort of JIA cases and controls studied to date has found the strongest association with the HLA-DRB1 region. Two independent effects have been identified, amino acid 67 and 13. Interestingly, amino acid 13 has previously been associated with adult rheumatoid arthritis (RA) whereas amino acid 67 has not. Further analysis to look for independent effects across the rest of the HLA region is now underway.

Acknowledgements: Childhood Arthritis Prospective Study, Childhood Arthritis Response to Medication Study, BSPAR study group, Cincinnati Registry for Juvenile Arthritis Genetics, Consortium for Juvenile Arthritis Genetics, USA-Juvenile Arthritis Genetics Cohort.


Disclosure:

A. Hinks,
None;

J. Cobb,
None;

B. Han,
None;

M. C. Marion,
None;

M. Sudman,
None;

P. Martin,
None;

J. F. Bohnsack,
None;

L. R. Wedderburn,
None;

J. P. Haas,
None;

P. de Bakker,
None;

C. D. Langefeld,
None;

S. Raychaudhuri,
None;

S. Prahalad,
None;

S. D. Thompson,
None;

W. Thomson,
None.

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