Evaluation of genome-wide loci of iron metabolism in hereditary hemochromatosis identifies PCSK7 as a host risk factor of liver cirrhosis

Felix Stickel(Universidad Iberoamericana), Stephan Buch(Technische Universität Dresden), Heinz Zoller(University Hospital Innsbruck), R. Hultcrantz(Karolinska University Hospital), Sabina Gallati(University Hospital of Bern), C.H. Österreicher(Medical University of Vienna), Armin Finkenstedt(University Hospital Innsbruck), Andreas Stadlmayr(Krankenhaus Oberndorf), Elmar Aigner(Krankenhaus Oberndorf), Enijad Sahinbegovic(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Christoph Sarrazin(Goethe University Frankfurt), Clemens Schafmayer, Felix Braun, Wiebke Erhart, Michael Nothnagel, Markus M. Lerch, Julia Mayerle, Henry Völzke(Universitätsmedizin Greifswald), André Schaller(University Hospital of Bern), Wolfgang Kratzer, Bernhard O. Boehm(Universität Ulm), Bence Sipos(University Children's Hospital Tübingen), Mauro D’Amato, Leif Törkvist(Karolinska Institutet), Per Stål(Karolinska University Hospital), Alexander Arlt, André Franke(University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein), Thomas Becker, Michael Krawczak, Jochen Zwerina(Hanusch Hospital), Thomas Berg(University Hospital Leipzig), Holger Hinrichsen(Clinical Research Center Kiel), Elisabeth Krones(Medical University of Graz), Christian Dejaco(Medical University of Graz), Michael Straßer(University of Salzburg), Christian Datz(Krankenhaus Oberndorf), Jochen Hampe(Technische Universität Dresden)
Human Molecular Genetics
February 20, 2014
Cited by 53Open Access
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Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have revealed genetic determinants of iron metabolism, but correlation of these with clinical phenotypes is pending. Homozygosity for HFE C282Y is the predominant genetic risk factor for hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) and may cause liver cirrhosis. However, this genotype has a low penetrance. Thus, detection of yet unknown genetic markers that identify patients at risk of developing severe liver disease is necessary for better prevention. Genetic loci associated with iron metabolism (TF, TMPRSS6, PCSK7, TFR2 and Chr2p14) in recent GWAS and liver fibrosis (PNPLA3) in recent meta-analysis were analyzed for association with either liver cirrhosis or advanced fibrosis in 148 German HFE C282Y homozygotes. Replication of associations was sought in additional 499 Austrian/Swiss and 112 HFE C282Y homozygotes from Sweden. Only variant rs236918 in the PCSK7 gene (proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 7) was associated with cirrhosis or advanced fibrosis (P = 1.02 × 10(-5)) in the German cohort with genotypic odds ratios of 3.56 (95% CI 1.29-9.77) for CG heterozygotes and 5.38 (95% CI 2.39-12.10) for C allele carriers. Association between rs236918 and cirrhosis was confirmed in Austrian/Swiss HFE C282Y homozygotes (P = 0.014; ORallelic = 1.82 (95% CI 1.12-2.95) but not in Swedish patients. Post hoc combined analyses of German/Swiss/Austrian patients with available liver histology (N = 244, P = 0.00014, ORallelic = 2.84) and of males only (N = 431, P = 2.17 × 10(-5), ORallelic = 2.54) were consistent with the premier finding. Association between rs236918 and cirrhosis was not confirmed in alcoholic cirrhotics, suggesting specificity of this genetic risk factor for HH. PCSK7 variant rs236918 is a risk factor for cirrhosis in HH patients homozygous for the HFE C282Y mutation.


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