A whole-genome sequence study identifies genetic risk factors for neuromyelitis optica

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Abstract

Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a rare autoimmune disease that affects the optic nerve and spinal cord. Most NMO patients (> 70%) are seropositive for circulating autoantibodies against aquaporin 4 (NMO-IgG+). Here, we meta-analyze whole-genome sequences from 86 NMO cases and 460 controls with genome-wide SNP array from 129 NMO cases and 784 controls to test for association with SNPs and copy number variation (total N = 215 NMO cases, 1244 controls). We identify two independent signals in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region associated with NMO-IgG+, one of which may be explained by structural variation in the complement component 4 genes. Mendelian Randomization analysis reveals a significant causal effect of known systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but not multiple sclerosis (MS), risk variants in NMO-IgG+. Our results suggest that genetic variants in the MHC region contribute to the etiology of NMO-IgG+ and that NMO-IgG+ is genetically more similar to SLE than MS.

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Estrada, K., Whelan, C. W., Zhao, F., Bronson, P., Handsaker, R. E., Sun, C., … MacArthur, D. G. (2018). A whole-genome sequence study identifies genetic risk factors for neuromyelitis optica. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04332-3

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