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  • The Genetic Architecture of...
    Roederer, Mario; Quaye, Lydia; Mangino, Massimo; Beddall, Margaret H.; Mahnke, Yolanda; Chattopadhyay, Pratip; Tosi, Isabella; Napolitano, Luca; Terranova Barberio, Manuela; Menni, Cristina; Villanova, Federica; Di Meglio, Paola; Spector, Tim D.; Nestle, Frank O.

    Cell, 04/2015, Letnik: 161, Številka: 2
    Journal Article

    Despite recent discoveries of genetic variants associated with autoimmunity and infection, genetic control of the human immune system during homeostasis is poorly understood. We undertook a comprehensive immunophenotyping approach, analyzing 78,000 immune traits in 669 female twins. From the top 151 heritable traits (up to 96% heritable), we used replicated GWAS to obtain 297 SNP associations at 11 genetic loci, explaining up to 36% of the variation of 19 traits. We found multiple associations with canonical traits of all major immune cell subsets and uncovered insights into genetic control for regulatory T cells. This data set also revealed traits associated with loci known to confer autoimmune susceptibility, providing mechanistic hypotheses linking immune traits with the etiology of disease. Our data establish a bioresource that links genetic control elements associated with normal immune traits to common autoimmune and infectious diseases, providing a shortcut to identifying potential mechanisms of immune-related diseases. Display omitted •Resource of heritabilities and genetic associations of 80,000 immune traits in 669 twins•Genetic associations with immune cell frequencies and surface protein expression levels•Of the top 150 traits, 11 genetic loci explained up to 36% of variation of 19 traits•Loci include autoimmune susceptibility genes, providing etiological hypotheses The study of a large and homogenous population of human twins identifies numerous genetic loci controlling the phenotype or number of functionally important immune subsets in the blood, providing a database to test associations of any genetic locus with more than 78,000 different immune traits.