Frontiers in Endocrinology (Jul 2016)

Association studies of the GPR103 and BCL2L15 genes in autoimmune thyroid disease in the Japanese population

  • Yoshiyuki Ban,
  • Teruaki Tozaki,
  • Yasuko Nakano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2016.00092
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

Read online

While the past genome wide association study (GWAS) for autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITDs) was done in Caucasians, a recent GWAS in Caucasian patients with both AITD and type 1 diabetes (a variant of autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 3, APS3v) identified five non-HLA genes: BCL2L15, MAGI3, PHTF1, PTPN22, and GPR103. The aim of our study was to replicate these associations with AITD in a Japanese population. Since analyzing the rs2476601 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within the PTPN22 gene revealed no polymorphism in the Japanese, we analyzed 4 SNPs, rs2358994 (in BCL2L15), rs2153977 (in MAGI3), rs1111695 (in PHTF1), and rs7679475 (in GPR103) genotypes in a case-control study based on 447 Japanese AITD patients (277 Graves’ disease [GD] and 170 Hashimoto’s thyroiditis [HT] patients) and 225 matched Japanese controls using the high-resolution melting and unlabeled probe methods. Case-control association studies were performed using the chi square and Fisher’s exact tests with Yates correction. The G allele of rs7679475 (A/G) was associated with HT compared with controls (P =0.022, odds ratio [OR] =0.69). GD showed no significant associations with any SNPs. However, when patients with GD were stratified according to Graves’ ophthalmopathy (GO), the G allele of rs2358994 (A/G) was associated with GO vs. controls (P =0.018, OR =1.52). These findings suggest that in the Japanese population the GPR103 gene may contribute to the pathogenesis of HT. Moreover, this study demonstrated that the SNP rs2358994 within BCL2L15 gene is associated to GO in the Japanese population.

Keywords