Somatic mosaicism and common genetic variation contribute to the risk of very-early-onset inflammatory bowel disease.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
February 21, 2020
Publication Type
Article
Contributor
Serra, Eva Gonçalves | |
Schwerd, Tobias | |
Moutsianas, Loukas | |
Cavounidis, Athena | |
Fachal, Laura | |
Pandey, Sumeet | |
Kammermeier, Jochen | |
Croft, Nicholas M | |
Posovszky, Carsten | |
Rodrigues, Astor | |
Russell, Richard K | |
Barakat, Farah | |
Auth, Marcus K H | |
Heuschkel, Robert | |
Zilbauer, Matthias | |
Fyderek, Krzysztof | |
Braegger, Christian | |
Travis, Simon P | |
Satsangi, Jack | |
Parkes, Miles | |
Thapar, Nikhil | |
Ferry, Helen | |
Matte, Julie C | |
Gilmour, Kimberly C | |
Wedrychowicz, Andrzej | |
Sullivan, Peter | |
Moore, Carmel | |
Sambrook, Jennifer | |
Ouwehand, Willem | |
Roberts, David | |
Danesh, John | |
Baeumler, Toni A | |
Fulga, Tudor A | |
Karaminejadranjbar, Mohammad | |
Ahmed, Ahmed | |
Wilson, Rachel | |
Barrett, Jeffrey C | |
Elkadri, Abdul | |
Griffiths, Anne M | |
Snapper, Scott B | |
Shah, Neil | |
Muise, Aleixo M | |
Wilson, David C | |
Uhlig, Holm H | |
Anderson, Carl A |
Series
Nature communications
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2041-1723
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
32081864
Description
Very-early-onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD) is a heterogeneous phenotype associated with a spectrum of rare Mendelian disorders. Here, we perform whole-exome-sequencing and genome-wide genotyping in 145 patients (median age-at-diagnosis of 3.5 years), in whom no Mendelian disorders were clinically suspected. In five patients we detect a primary immunodeficiency or enteropathy, with clinical consequences (XIAP, CYBA, SH2D1A, PCSK1). We also present a case study of a VEO-IBD patient with a mosaic de novo, pathogenic allele in CYBB. The mutation is present in ~70% of phagocytes and sufficient to result in defective bacterial handling but not life-threatening infections. Finally, we show that VEO-IBD patients have, on average, higher IBD polygenic risk scores than population controls (99 patients and 18,780 controls; P < 4 × 10-10), and replicate this finding in an independent cohort of VEO-IBD cases and controls (117 patients and 2,603 controls; P < 5 × 10-10). This discovery indicates that a polygenic component operates in VEO-IBD pathogenesis.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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s41467-019-14275-y.pdf | Adobe PDF | 1.44 MB | published |