Long-range DNA looping and gene expression analyses identify DEXI as an autoimmune disease candidate gene

  • Lucy J Davison
  • Chris Wallace
  • Jason D Cooper
  • Nathan F Cope
  • Nicola K Wilson
  • Deborah J Smyth
  • Joanna M M Howson
  • Nada Saleh
  • Abdullah Al-Jeffery
  • Karen L Angus
  • Helen E Stevens
  • Sarah Nutland
  • Simon Duley
  • Richard M R Coulson
  • Neil M Walker
  • Oliver S Burren
  • Catherine M Rice
  • Francois Cambien
  • Tanja Zeller
  • Thomas Munzel
  • Karl Lackner
  • Stefan Blakenberg
  • Peter Fraser
  • Berthold Gottgens
  • John A Todd
  • Tony Attwood
  • Stephanie Belz
  • Peter Braund
  • François Cambien
  • Jason Cooper
  • Abi Crisp-Hihn
  • Patrick Diemert
  • Panos Deloukas
  • Nicola Foad
  • Jeanette Erdmann
  • Alison H Goodall
  • Jay Gracey
  • Emma Gray
  • Rhian G Williams
  • Susanne Heimerl
  • Christian Hengstenberg
  • Jennifer Jolley
  • Unni Krishnan
  • Heather Lloyd-Jones
  • Ingrid Lugauer
  • Per Lundmark
  • Seraya Maouche
  • Jasbir S Moore
  • David Muir
  • Elizabeth Murray
  • Chris P Nelson
  • Jessica Neudert
  • David Niblett
  • Karen O'Leary
  • Willem H Ouwehand
  • Helen Pollard
  • Angela Rankin
  • Catherine M Rice
  • Hendrik Sager
  • Nilesh J Samani
  • Jennifer Sambrook
  • Gerd Schmitz
  • Michael Scholz
  • Laura Schroeder
  • Heribert Schunkert
  • Ann-Christine Syvannen
  • Stefanie Tennstedt
  • Chris Wallace
  • CardioGenics Consortium

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Abstract

The chromosome 16p13 region has been associated with several autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes (T1D) and multiple sclerosis (MS). CLEC16A has been reported as the most likely candidate gene in the region, since it contains the most disease-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), as well as an imunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif. However, here we report that intron 19 of CLEC16A, containing the most autoimmune disease-associated SNPs, appears to behave as a regulatory sequence, affecting the expression of a neighbouring gene, DEXI. The CLEC16A alleles that are protective from T1D and MS are associated with increased expression of DEXI, and no other genes in the region, in two independent monocyte gene expression data sets. Critically, using chromosome conformation capture (3C), we identified physical proximity between the DEXI promoter region and intron 19 of CLEC16A, separated by a loop of >150 kb. In reciprocal experiments, a 20 kb fragment of intron 19 of CLEC16A, containing SNPs associated with T1D and MS, as well as with DEXI expression, interacted with the promotor region of DEXI but not with candidate DNA fragments containing other potential causal genes in the region, including CLEC16A. Intron 19 of CLEC16A is highly enriched for transcription-factor-binding events and markers associated with enhancer activity. Taken together, these data indicate that although the causal variants in the 16p13 region lie within CLEC16A, DEXI is an unappreciated autoimmune disease candidate gene, and illustrate the power of the 3C approach in progressing from genome-wide association studies results to candidate causal genes.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0964-6906
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15.01.2012

Comment Deanary

© The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press.

PubMed 21989056