Abstract

The triggering and development of Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is conditioned by environmental and genetic factors. Despite the identification of more than one hundred genetic variants associated with the disease, not all the cases can be explained. Here, we performed Whole Exome Sequencing in 9 multiplex families (N = 30) to identify rare variants susceptible to play a role in the disease pathogenesis. We pre-selected 77 genes which carried rare variants with a complete segregation with RA in the studied families. Follow-up linkage and association analyses with pVAAST highlighted significant RA association of 43 genes (p-value < 0.05 after 106 permutations) and pinpointed their most likely causal variant. We re-sequenced the 10 most significant likely causal variants (p-value ≤ 3.78*10−3 after 106 permutations) in the extended pedigrees and 9 additional multiplex families (N = 110). Only one SNV in SUPT20H: c.73A>T (p.Lys25*), presented a complete segregation with RA in an extended pedigree with early-onset cases. In summary, we identified in this study a new variant associated with RA in SUPT20H gene. This gene belongs to several biological pathways like macro-autophagy and monocyte/macrophage differentiation, which contribute to RA pathogenesis. In addition, these results showed that analyzing rare variants using a family-based approach is a strategy that allows to identify RA risk loci, even with a small dataset.

Highlights

  • Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is one of the most frequent autoimmune disease, affecting 0.3 to1% of the worldwide population

  • We sequenced the whole exome of 19 RA cases and 11 healthy individuals belonging to 9 multiplex families

  • We reduced the set of candidate loci to 49 genes (64% of the genes tested with pVAAST)

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Summary

Introduction

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is one of the most frequent autoimmune disease, affecting 0.3 to. An association between RA and PLB1 gene [11] and several other genes involved in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as NDUFA7 and SCO1 [10] has been observed using respectively a familial-based strategy and a case-control analysis Both studies, conducted in non-European populations, support the strategy of sequencing the whole exome of RA cases to identify new RA candidate variants. We aimed at identifying new loci associated with RA in the French population by focusing our research on rare coding variants For this purpose, we sequenced RA cases and healthy relatives from 9 multiplex families which carried HLA-DRB1 risk alleles. We should be able to identify both genetic factors modulating the effect of HLA-DRB1 SE and acting independently from HLA loci

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