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Triangulating molecular evidence to prioritise candidate causal genes at established atopic dermatitis loci

Title: Triangulating molecular evidence to prioritise candidate causal genes at established atopic dermatitis loci
Authors: Sobczyk, M; Richardson, T; Zuber, V; Min, J; Gaunt, T; Paternoster, L; EQTLGen Consortium; BIOS Consortium; GoDMC
Publisher Information: Taylor and Francis
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: Imperial College London: Spiral
Subject Terms: eQTLGen Consortium; BIOS Consortium; GoDMC; 1103 Clinical Sciences; Surgery
Description: Genome-wide association studies for atopic dermatitis (AD) have identified 25 reproducible loci. We attempt to prioritize candidate causal genes at these loci using extensive molecular resources compiled into a bioinformatics pipeline. We identified a list of 103 molecular resources for AD aetiology, including expression, protein and DNA methylation QTL datasets in skin or immune-relevant tissues which were tested for overlap with GWAS signals. This was combined with functional annotation using regulatory variant prediction, and features such as promoter-enhancer interactions, expression studies and variant fine-mapping. For each gene at each locus, we condensed the evidence into a prioritization score. Across the investigated loci, we detected significant enrichment of genes with adaptive immune regulatory function and epidermal barrier formation among the top prioritized genes. At 8 loci, we were able to prioritize a single candidate gene (IL6R, ADO, PRR5L, IL7R, ETS1, INPP5D, MDM1, TRAF3). In addition, at 6 of the 25 loci, our analysis prioritizes less familiar candidates (SLC22A5, IL2RA, MDM1, DEXI, ADO, STMN3). Our analysis provides support for previously implicated genes at several AD GWAS loci, as well as evidence for plausible additional candidates at others, which may represent potential targets for drug discovery.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: Journal of Investigative Surgery; http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/91961
DOI: 10.1101/2020.11.30.20240838
Availability: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/91961; https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.11.30.20240838
Rights: © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier, Inc. on behalf of the Society for Investigative Dermatology. Under a Creative Commons license ; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.82B0EFFD
Database: BASE