Genome-wide association study identifies <i>NRG1</i> as a susceptibility locus for Hirschsprung's disease

María-Mercé García-Barceló(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Clara Sze-Man Tang, Esw Ngan(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Vincent Chi‐Hang Lui(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Yan Chen(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Man‐Ting So(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Thomas Yuk-Yu Leon(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Xiaoping Miao(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Cathy K.Y. Shum(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Fengqin Liu(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Ming-Yiu Yeung, Zhenwei Yuan(China Medical University), Weihong Guo(Beijing Children’s Hospital), Lei Liu, Xiaobing Sun(Shandong First Medical University), Liuming Huang(Beijing City University), Jinfa Tou(Children's Hospital of Zhejiang University), You‐Qiang Song, Danny Chan, Kmc Cheung(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Kenneth Kak‐Yuen Wong(Texas Endosurgery Institute), Stacey S. Cherny(Genome Research Foundation), Pak C. Sham(Center for Human Reproduction), Paul Kwong‐Hang Tam(Texas Endosurgery Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 7, 2009
Cited by 188

Abstract

Hirschsprung's disease (HSCR), or aganglionic megacolon, is a congenital disorder characterized by the absence of enteric ganglia in variable portions of the distal intestine. RET is a well-established susceptibility locus, although existing evidence strongly suggests additional loci contributing to sporadic HSCR. To identify these additional genetic loci, we carried out a genome-wide association study using the Affymetrix 500K marker set. We successfully genotyped 293,836 SNPs in 181 Chinese subjects with sporadic HSCR and 346 ethnically matched control subjects. The SNPs most associated with HSCR were genotyped in an independent set of 190 HSCR and 510 control subjects. Aside from SNPs in RET, the strongest overall associations in plausible candidate genes were found for 2 SNPs located in intron 1 of the neuregulin1 gene (NRG1) on 8p12, with rs16879552 and rs7835688 yielding odds ratios of 1.68 [CI(95%):(1.40, 2.00), P = 1.80 x 10(-8)] and 1.98 [CI(95%):(1.59, 2.47), P = 1.12 x 10(-9)], respectively, for the heterozygous risk genotypes under an additive model. There was also a significant interaction between RET and NRG1 (P = 0.0095), increasing the odds ratio 2.3-fold to 19.53 for the RET rs2435357 risk genotype (TT) in the presence of the NRG1 rs7835688 heterozygote, indicating that NRG1 is a modifier of HSRC penetrance. Our highly significant association findings are backed-up by the important role of NRG1 as regulator of the development of the enteric ganglia precursors. The identification of NRG1 as an additional HSCR susceptibility locus not only opens unique fields of investigation into the mechanisms underlying the HSCR pathology, but also the mechanisms by which a discrete number of loci interact with each other to cause disease.


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