PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Pooled Resequencing of 122 Ulcerative Colitis Genes in a Large Dutch Cohort Suggests Population-Specific Associations of Rare Variants in MUC2.

  • Marijn C Visschedijk,
  • Rudi Alberts,
  • Soren Mucha,
  • Patrick Deelen,
  • Dirk J de Jong,
  • Marieke Pierik,
  • Lieke M Spekhorst,
  • Floris Imhann,
  • Andrea E van der Meulen-de Jong,
  • C Janneke van der Woude,
  • Adriaan A van Bodegraven,
  • Bas Oldenburg,
  • Mark Löwenberg,
  • Gerard Dijkstra,
  • David Ellinghaus,
  • Stefan Schreiber,
  • Cisca Wijmenga,
  • Initiative on Crohn and Colitis,
  • Parelsnoer Institute,
  • Manuel A Rivas,
  • Andre Franke,
  • Cleo C van Diemen,
  • Rinse K Weersma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159609
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. e0159609

Abstract

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Genome-wide association studies have revealed several common genetic risk variants for ulcerative colitis (UC). However, little is known about the contribution of rare, large effect genetic variants to UC susceptibility. In this study, we performed a deep targeted re-sequencing of 122 genes in Dutch UC patients in order to investigate the contribution of rare variants to the genetic susceptibility to UC. The selection of genes consists of 111 established human UC susceptibility genes and 11 genes that lead to spontaneous colitis when knocked-out in mice. In addition, we sequenced the promoter regions of 45 genes where known variants exert cis-eQTL-effects. Targeted pooled re-sequencing was performed on DNA of 790 Dutch UC cases. The Genome of the Netherlands project provided sequence data of 500 healthy controls. After quality control and prioritization based on allele frequency and pathogenicity probability, follow-up genotyping of 171 rare variants was performed on 1021 Dutch UC cases and 1166 Dutch controls. Single-variant association and gene-based analyses identified an association of rare variants in the MUC2 gene with UC. The associated variants in the Dutch population could not be replicated in a German replication cohort (1026 UC cases, 3532 controls). In conclusion, this study has identified a putative role for MUC2 on UC susceptibility in the Dutch population and suggests a population-specific contribution of rare variants to UC.