A large-scale screen for coding variants predisposing to psoriasis

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Abstract

To explore the contribution of functional coding variants to psoriasis, we analyzed nonsynonymous single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) across the genome by exome sequencing in 781 psoriasis cases and 676 controls and through follow-up validation in 1,326 candidate genes by targeted sequencing in 9,946 psoriasis cases and 9,906 controls from the Chinese population. We discovered two independent missense SNVs in IL23R and GJB2 of low frequency and five common missense SNVs in LCE3D, ERAP1, CARD14 and ZNF816A associated with psoriasis at genome-wide significance. Rare missense SNVs in FUT2 and TARBP1 were also observed with suggestive evidence of association. Single-variant and gene-based association analyses of nonsynonymous SNVs did not identify newly associated genes for psoriasis in the regions subjected to targeted resequencing. This suggests that coding variants in the 1,326 targeted genes contribute only a limited fraction of the overall genetic risk for psoriasis. © 2014 Nature America, Inc.

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Zhang, X., Tang, H., Jin, X., Li, Y., Jiang, H., Tang, X., … Wang, J. (2014). A large-scale screen for coding variants predisposing to psoriasis. Nature Genetics, 46(1), 45–50. https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.2827

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