Abstract

BackgroundPsoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, for which genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many genetic variants as risk markers. However, the details of underlying molecular mechanisms, especially which variants are functional, are poorly understood.MethodsWe utilized a computational approach to survey psoriasis-associated functional variants that might affect protein functions or gene expression levels. We developed a pipeline by integrating publicly available datasets provided by GWAS Catalog, FANTOM5, GTEx, SNP2TFBS, and DeepBlue. To identify functional variants on exons or splice sites, we used a web-based annotation tool in the Ensembl database. To search for noncoding functional variants within promoters or enhancers, we used eQTL data calculated by GTEx. The data of variants lying on transcription factor binding sites provided by SNP2TFBS were used to predict detailed functions of the variants.ResultsWe discovered 22 functional variant candidates, of which 8 were in noncoding regions. We focused on the enhancer variant rs72635708 (T > C) in the 1p36.23 region; this variant is within the enhancer region of the ERRFI1 gene, which regulates lipid metabolism in the liver and skin morphogenesis via EGF signaling. Further analysis showed that the ERRFI1 promoter spatially contacts with the enhancer, despite the 170 kb distance between them. We found that this variant lies on the AP-1 complex binding motif and may modulate binding levels.ConclusionsThe minor allele rs72635708 (rs72635708-C) might affect the ERRFI1 promoter activity, which results in unstable expression of ERRFI1, enhancing the risk of psoriasis via disruption of lipid metabolism and skin cell proliferation. Our study represents a successful example of predicting molecular pathogenesis by integration and reanalysis of public data.

Highlights

  • Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, for which genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many genetic variants as risk markers

  • Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) reported to be associated with psoriasis were extracted from GWAS Catalog-registered data, and variants with high linkage disequilibrium were obtained and used in subsequent analysis

  • As for regulatory variants, we looked for those located in active enhancers that disrupted binding motifs for Transcription factor (TF) and were expected to affect binding affinities

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Summary

Introduction

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, for which genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many genetic variants as risk markers. Many GWAS have been conducted for various phenotypes, with a large number of traitassociated SNPs accumulated in public databases, such as the GWAS Catalog [2] Understanding why these SNPs are associated with diseases has been difficult because. Hi-C, which is the NGS-based method of capturing genome-wide DNA–DNA interactions, has revealed that the genome is partitioned into megabasescale structural domains called topologically associating domains (TADs) [5,6,7]. These data have been used to detect locality and contact between gene promoters and distant cis-regulatory elements in various living tissues and cells. Integrated analysis of various epigenetic data, including Hi-C data, can help in the functional annotation of noncoding sequences involved in the long-range regulation of gene expression, disruptions of which lead to various diseases

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