Association Study of Exon Variants in the NF-kappa B and TGF beta Pathways Identifies CD40 as a Modifier of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

作者:Bello Luca; Flanigan Kevin M; Weiss Robert B; Spitali Pietro; Aartsma Rus Annemieke; Muntoni Francesco; Zaharieva Irina; Ferlini Alessandra; Mercuri Eugenio; Tuffery Giraud Sylvie; Claustres Mireille; Straub Volker; Lochmuller Hanns; Barp Andrea; Vianello Sara; Pegoraro Elena; Punetha Jaya; Gordish Dressman Heather; Giri Mamta; McDonald Craig M; Hoffman Eric P*
来源:American Journal of Human Genetics, 2016, 99(5): 1163-1171.
DOI:10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.08.023

摘要

The expressivity of Mendelian diseases can be influenced by factors independent from the pathogenic mutation: in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), for instance, age at loss of ambulation (LoA) varies between individuals whose DMD mutations all abolish dystrophin expression. This suggests the existence of trans-acting variants in modifier genes. Common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in candidate genes (SPP1, encoding osteopontin, and LTBP4, encoding latent transforming growth factor beta [TGF beta]-binding protein 4) have been established as DMD modifiers. We performed a genome-wide association study of age at LoA in a sub-cohort of European or European American ancestry (n = 109) from the Cooperative International Research Group Duchenne Natural History Study (CINRG-DNHS). We focused on protein-altering variants (Exome Chip) and included glucocorticoid treatment as a covariate. As expected, due to the small population size, no SNPs displayed an exome-wide significant p value (< 1.8 x 10(-6)). Subsequently, we prioritized 438 SNPs in the vicinities of 384 genes implicated in DMD-related pathways, i.e., the nuclear-factor-kappa B and TGF beta pathways. The minor allele at rs1883832, in the 5'-untranslated region of CD40, was associated with earlier LoA (p = 3.5 x 10(-5)). This allele diminishes the expression of CD40, a co-stimulatory molecule for T cell polarization. We validated this association in multiple independent DMD cohorts (United Dystrophinopathy Project, Bio-NMD, and Padova, total n = 660), establishing this locus as a DMD modifier. This finding points to cell-mediated immunity as a relevant pathogenetic mechanism and potential therapeutic target in DMD.