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BMC Genomics logoLink to BMC Genomics
. 2016 Nov 18;17:939. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-3276-z

Pooled genome wide association detects association upstream of FCRL3 with Graves’ disease

Jwu Jin Khong 1,2,3,, Kathryn P Burdon 4, Yi Lu 5, Kate Laurie 6, Lefta Leonardos 6, Paul N Baird 7, Srujana Sahebjada 7, John P Walsh 8,9, Adam Gajdatsy 10, Peter R Ebeling 11, Peter Shane Hamblin 1,12, Rosemary Wong 12, Simon P Forehan 13, Spiros Fourlanos 13, Anthony P Roberts 14, Matthew Doogue 15, Dinesh Selva 16, Grant W Montgomery 17, Stuart Macgregor 5, Jamie E Craig 6
PMCID: PMC5116198  PMID: 27863461

Abstract

Background

Graves’ disease is an autoimmune thyroid disease of complex inheritance. Multiple genetic susceptibility loci are thought to be involved in Graves’ disease and it is therefore likely that these can be identified by genome wide association studies. This study aimed to determine if a genome wide association study, using a pooling methodology, could detect genomic loci associated with Graves’ disease.

Results

Nineteen of the top ranking single nucleotide polymorphisms including HLA-DQA1 and C6orf10, were clustered within the Major Histo-compatibility Complex region on chromosome 6p21, with rs1613056 reaching genome wide significance (p = 5 × 10−8). Technical validation of top ranking non-Major Histo-compatablity complex single nucleotide polymorphisms with individual genotyping in the discovery cohort revealed four single nucleotide polymorphisms with p ≤ 10−4. Rs17676303 on chromosome 1q23.1, located upstream of FCRL3, showed evidence of association with Graves’ disease across the discovery, replication and combined cohorts. A second single nucleotide polymorphism rs9644119 downstream of DPYSL2 showed some evidence of association supported by finding in the replication cohort that warrants further study.

Conclusions

Pooled genome wide association study identified a genetic variant upstream of FCRL3 as a susceptibility locus for Graves’ disease in addition to those identified in the Major Histo-compatibility Complex. A second locus downstream of DPYSL2 is potentially a novel genetic variant in Graves’ disease that requires further confirmation.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-3276-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Keywords: Graves’ disease, Genome-wide association study, Pooled blood

Background

Graves’ disease (GD) is an autoimmune thyroid disease which typically presents as thyrotoxicosis and goitre; other clinical findings include Graves’ orbitopathy, dermopathy and acropachy. The incidence rate of GD is 15 per 100, 000 persons per year with an overall mean prevalence of 1152 per 100, 000 population in the United States [1, 2]. Women are disproportionately more affected with the female to male ratio reported at 7.3:1 [1]. The disease also occurs in children at one tenth the prevalence rate of all ages [1].

GD is a complex disease with a strong familial predisposition; [37] the triggers are poorly understood but various environmental factors were linked to onset of GD such as stress, smoking and Yersinia infection in genetically susceptible individuals [8, 9]. GD shows a strong familial predisposition. The concordance rate for GD in monozygotic twins is significantly higher than dizygotic twins and model-fitting analysis predicted that genetic factors account for 79 % of disease heritability in twins [10]. With a concordance rate of 22–35 % for monozygotic twins, environmental and modifier factors are likely to play a key role [10, 11]. Clustering of GD with other autoimmune conditions including type I diabetes mellitus, myasthenia gravis, polymyositis, lupus erythematosus and Addison’s disease suggest genes regulating the immune system shared by these diseases might also contribute towards the genetic susceptibility for GD [3].

The genetic susceptibility of GD can be broadly categorized into genes involved in immune regulation, and thyroid specific genes. Genes confirmed to be associated with GD include the following: multiple loci within the Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) I and II region, as well as non-HLA loci CTLA4, PTPN22, CD40, IL2A, FCRL3 and TSHR [1226]. The contributions from each of these genetic variants are modest. From candidate gene studies, HLA class II alleles DRB1*03(DR3), DQA1*0501, DQB1*02 were significantly associated with GD with odd ratios of 2 to 3 for DR3 [5, 15, 27, 28]. CTLA4 A49G, and CT60 3′UTR polymorphisms were more frequent in GD with an odds ratio of 1.4 to 2, [12, 13, 2931] and association with PTPN22 polymorphism has an odds ratio of 1.5 to 1.9 [14, 16, 17].

Genome wide association studies (GWAS) have replicated earlier candidate gene study findings and identified additional new genetic loci. The earliest GWAS studies on autoimmune thyroid disease showed association of GD with multiple loci within the HLA class I and II regions, and also in TSHR and FCRL3 [26, 32]. More recently two new risk loci for GD, the RNASET2-FGFR1OP-CCR6 region at 6q27 and an intergenic region at 4p14 were reported, along with confirmation of positive association of GD with SNPs in HLA-DPB1, TSHR, CLTA4 and FCRL3 [33]. Using a custom array, association of SNPs near PTPN22, CTLA4, TSHR, RNASET2-FGFR1OP-CCR6 loci with GD were replicated, and seven novel susceptibility loci, MMEL1, LPP, BACH2, PRICKLE1, ITGAM, rs1534422 at 2p25.1 and rs4409785 at 11q21 were identified but the results require confirmation in replication studies [24].

A pooled GWAS strategy can effectively identify gene variants in multiple diseases. Using relatively small numbers of cases and controls, pooled GWAS has previously been used to identify the known susceptibility loci CFH and ARMS2/HTRA1 in age related macular degeneration and LOXL1 in pseudoexfoliation syndrome [34]. A pooled DNA study has also identified a new susceptibility locus, HGF, in keratoconus (a progressive corneal degeneration) and additional novel candidate genes related to platelet reactivity in diabetic patients [3436]. The study design must be carefully considered to include multiple pools to minimise pooling errors and an appropriate array platform to extract maximal available information from the pooled DNA [37, 38].

The aim of this study was to determine if GWAS using DNA pooling methodology could replicate genomic loci associated with GD and discover new genetic loci.

Methods

Definition of Graves’ disease

GD cases were participants with biochemically confirmed hyperthyroidism on thyroid function tests; and had either the presence of Graves’ orbitopathy, or positive thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) antibodies or uniform increase in uptake on technetium-99 m pertechnetate thyroid scan.

Discovery cohort

The Australian Thyroid-associated Orbitopathy Research (ATOR) discovery cohort consisting of 412 GD cases with and without Graves’ orbitopathy of European descent was recruited from endocrinology and ophthalmology clinics in the hospitals and private practices from Victoria and South Australia.

A total of 498 controls were recruited from two Australian populations. These comprised 198 adult patients with keratoconus, a non-autoimmune eye disease unrelated to GD, who were recruited from eye clinics in Melbourne, and 300 healthy controls aged over 50 years recruited from retirement villages and the general community in South Australia. The control cohort was not actively screened for GD, but none of the controls reported having this condition.

Replication cohort

An independent group of 539 GD cases and 1230 controls were recruited to form a replication cohort. The GD cases were new cases recruited into the ATOR cohort (n = 373) from Melbourne, and endocrine and ophthalmology clinics from Western Australia (n = 166). The controls were research participants of European descent with eye diseases without recognizable association with GD or other autoimmune diseases (angle closure glaucoma or suspect, pigment dispersion syndrome, steroid responsive ocular hypertension, myopia and keratoconus) recruited in a collaborative effort from South Australia and Victoria to study the genetics of these eye diseases (age ranging from 9 to 92 years).

DNA pooling for GWAS study

Two methods of DNA pooling were used. For freshly collected samples, whole blood was pooled directly (pool 1) and for archived DNA samples, equimolar DNA pools were created (pools 2 and 3). Venous blood or DNA aliquots from all participants were thawed for 3 h before construction of 3 pool comparisons. Pool number 1 contained 154 GD cases and 198 controls, pool number 2 had 218 GD cases and 213 controls, and pool number 3 had 40 GD cases and 87 controls, giving a total of 412 cases and 498 controls from the discovery cohort. For pool 1, 100 μl of whole blood from each sample was mixed with protease and lysis buffer, vortexed and incubated, then samples were combined in one tube for whole blood pool construction, 1 tube each for cases and controls. DNA was extracted from the whole blood pool by using QIA-amp DNA blood maxi kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. For pool 2 and 3 samples, whole blood was lysed and DNA was extracted from each sample. Equimolar DNA pools were constructed in duplicate by step-wise dilutions of genomic DNA using QIA-amp DNA blood maxi kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA) to 75 ng/μl. We used Fluoroskan Ascent microplate fluorometer (ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) coupled with Picogreen reagents (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) for DNA quantitation. Comparisons were made to a standard curve generated from serial dilutions of Lambda DNA (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). A total of 451 ng of DNA from each sample was added to the equimolar DNA pool.

Pooling error

Previous studies showed that the majority of pooling errors arise from errors on the arrays rather than pool construction errors, [39] hence in this pooling design, multiple Illumina HumanOmni5-Quad arrays were used for each pool to reduce array errors. The pooling standard deviation is very small for the Illumina bead arrays, pooling standard deviation for HumanHap300 was estimated between 0.007 and 0.011, [38] and variance for the 1M array was 6.8 × 10−5 [34]. This encompasses both assays and pool construction errors. The Illumina HumanOmni5-Quad beadchip array supersedes its predecessor arrays; the HumanHap300 and 1M array, by virtue of its comprehensive coverage of the human genome but is similar in the way of the bead array design.

Pooled genotyping and analysis

Genome-wide genotyping was conducted at Queensland Institute of Medical Research (QIMR) Berghofer Medical Research Institute, using HumanOmni5-Quad beadchip microarray (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) which contained approximately 4.3 million markers. Three case and control pools, each replicated 2 to 4 times to minimise measurement error, were generated for comparisons.

The output of the raw beadscores from Illumina Beadstation were subjected to a series of data cleaning and quality control measures, as described previously for array-based DNA pooling studies [38, 40, 41]. SNPs with minor allele frequency (MAF) greater than 1 % from the reference panel of EUR samples in the 1000 Genomes Project were retained for subsequent analysis (i.e. 2.5 million SNPs). We excluded SNPs with more than 10 % negative beadscores, and SNPs with the sum of mean red and green scores smaller than 1200 across each array. A correction factor (corr) was calculated to rescale the green beadscore to calibrate the mean value of the pooling allele frequency (PAF) at 0.5 over all SNPs on each strand of the array. The PAF was computed based on the raw red intensities and the corrected green intensities as PAF = red/(red + green/corr) [40]. We further filtered non-autosomal SNPs and any SNPs with a significant variance difference between cases and controls.

A final set of autosomal SNPs meeting the following criteria: (1) contain sufficient number of probes (i.e., over ½ of expected number of probes for SNPs with MAF 1–5 %, or over 1/3 of expected number of probes for SNPs with MAF >5 %; (2) display no larger than 0.3 differences between PAF and reference allele frequency from EUR samples in the 1000 Genomes Project were taken forward for association testing. After data cleaning and quality control, 2.2M SNPs were left for association testing. A linear model was used to test for allelic association in the three case-control pools from GD discovery cohort. The test statistic corrected for pooling error was used to rank SNPs; with p values derived from chi-squared distribution with 1 ° of freedom to assess the significance of allele frequency difference between cases and controls. We then conducted a meta-analysis weighted by inverse variance to combine the results of the three case-control pool comparisons. The top-ranking SNPs in the meta-analysis were counter checked for proxies (i.e., linkage disequilibrium r 2 >0.5 with the index SNPs in the EUR populations). If proxy SNPs were available, they should also show evidence of association to be considered valid. A genome-wide significance threshold was set at 5 × 10−8 to account for multiple testing but SNPs with p < 1 × 10−6 were also included for further evaluation.

Individual genotyping and analysis

Top-ranked non-major histo-compatability complex (MHC) SNPs with p-value ≤1 × 10−6 were selected for technical validation genotyping in individual DNA samples that made up the pool as well as for genotyping in the replication cohorts. The top ranking SNPs were individually genotyped in the discovery cohort in 412 GD cases and 480 normal controls. A subset of 18 controls had insufficient residual samples for individual genotyping, hence the discrepancy in the final pooling and validation sample sizes.

Thirteen SNPS were genotyped on iPLEX Gold assay (Sequenom, San Diego, CA, USA) by using Sequenom MassARRAY® Analyzer in two batches. The ATOR discovery cohort and Western Australia replication cohort genotyping was performed at the Australian Genome Research Facility (Brisbane, Australia) and the ATOR replication cohort at GeneWorks Pty Ltd (Adelaide, Australia). The allele association analysis was performed using chi-square test (−−assoc) in PLINK, [42] independently for technical validation in the ATOR pooled discovery cohort, the replication cohorts and the overall in the discovery and replication cohorts. The odds ratio and 95 % confidence interval for allelic association was further adjusted for covariates age and sex using logistic regression analysis (−−logistic −−covar). SNPs with p ≤ 1 × 10−4 were considered validated in validation genotyping. For replication genotyping, p <0.05 was considered significant.

Results

The GD cases were predominantly female and younger when compared with controls (Table 1), hence subsequent individual genotyping analysis was adjusted for age and sex.

Table 1.

Demographics of Graves’ disease cases and controls in the discovery and replication cohorts

N Mean age (SD) Sex
Case Control Case Control p value Graves’ case Controls p value
Discovery cohort 412 498 45.3 (14.5) 56.3 (24.4) <0.001 Male 71 (17.23 %) Male 192 (41.03 %) <0.001
Female 341 (82.77 %) Female 276 (58.97 %)
Replication cohort 539 1230 44.5 (14.8) 48.1 (17.4) <0.001 Male 109 (20.30 %) Male 596 (49.30 %) <0.001
Female 428 (79.70 %) Female 613 (50.70 %)

In the discovery GWAS, 19 of the top 30 ranking SNPs clustered within the MHC region on chromosome 6p21 including rs9272937 in HLA-DQA1 (p 10−7), two SNPs within C6orf10 (p 10−7), and rs1613056 reaching genome wide significance (p = 5 × 10−8) (Additional file 1: Table S1). One SNP, rs9676286 on chromosome 19, reached genome-wide significance in the pooled GWAS (p = 1.08 × 10−8) for association with GD. However rs9676286 was not as strongly supported when we conducted technical validation genotyping of the individual DNA samples from the pools (p = 5.54 × 10−3).

An additional 12 top ranked non-MHC SNPs suggestive of association (p ~ 10−6) were also selected for validation. Of these, four SNPs showed evidence of association with p < 1 × 10−4 when we conducted technical validation genotyping in the individual DNA samples. They are rs1469893 on chr 15, rs17676303 on chr 1, rs78542322 on chr 6 and rs62469516 on chr 7 (Table 2). Amongst these four, rs1767303 was most strongly associated with GD with a P value at 1.14 × 10−8 (OR = 2.05, 95 % CI 1.57–2.67). When correlating odds ratio of effect allele frequencies in pooled GWAS with individual validation genotyping, the results showed strong correlation (r = 0.89, p <0.001) (Additional file 2: Figure S1).

Table 2.

Top ranking SNPs identified from pooled genome wide association study and validation genotyping in the discovery cohort

GWAS pooled genotyping (Cases = 412, Controls = 498) Validation individual genotyping (Cases = 412, Controls = 480)
SNP name Location chr and bp Gene A1 P value OR_A1 F_A F_U P value* OR_A1*
(95 % CI)
Rs9676286 Chr19q13.43
58126481
ZNF134 intron A 1.08 × 10−8 2.08 0.047 0.023 5.54 × 10−3 2.28 (1.27, 4.09)
rs9644119 Chr8p21.2
26517817
DPYSL2
2124 bp downstream
T 9.10 × 10-8 1.78 0.177 0.128 0.033 1.36 (1.03, 1.79)
rs11722643 Chr4p16.1
10127484
Intergenic
WDR1 upstream, ZNF518B downstream
T 1.03 × 10−7 1.88 0.101 0.054 1.38 × 10−3 1.91 (1.28, 2.83)
Rs686806 Chr 11q22.3
107228533
CWF19L2 intron T 2.36 × 10−7 1.70 0.242 0.168 9.6 × 10−4 1.53 (1.19, 1.97)
rs62469516 Chr7q21.13
88958624
ZNF804B intron A 2.68 × 10−7 0.51 0.043 0.088 5.73 × 10−5 0.41 (0.26, 0.63)
rs73452600 Chr 7q34
142828104
PIP 1070 bp upstream A 3.49 × 10−7 1.90 0.099 0.061 3.37 × 10−3 1.80 (1.22, 2.67)
Rs1662312 Chr 18p11.31
3220450
MYOM1 upstream A 5.72 × 10−7 0.51 0.040 0.080 5.33 × 10−4 0.45 (0.29, 0.71)
rs1469893 Chr 15q14
34988664
GJD2
56015 bp
Downstream
A 6.58 × 10−7 0.58 0.05 0.104 6.86 × 10−5 0.44 (0.29, 0.66)
Rs17676303 Chr 1q23.1
157679691
FCRL3
9044 bp upstream
T 8.05 × 10−7 1.68 0.254 0.150 1.14 × 10−8 2.05 (1.57, 2.67)
rs28578508 Chr18q12.1
32316007
DTNA intron A 8.16 × 10−7 0.56 0.062 0.099 2.80 × 10−3 0.56 (0.39, 0.82)
rs78542322 Chr 6q14.1
77291670
Intergenic
IMPG1 upstream
HTR1B downstream
T 9.82 × 10−7 0.52 0.071 0.141 3.27 × 10−5 0.47 (0.33, 0.67)
Rs3818779 Chr 10q26.11
121140671
GRK5 intron A 1.51 × −6 1.94 0.059 0.029 2.08 × 10−3 2.30 (1.35, 3.9)
rs2141440 Chr 11q14.3
90898463
Intergenic MIR4490 and FAT3 A 4.48 × 10−6 0.58 0.078 0.097 0.34 0.84 (0.59, 1.20)

F_U is individual genotyping minor allele frequency A1 in normal control, F_A is the allele frequency in Graves’ disease

OR is odd ratio for having minor allele in Graves’ cases compared to normal controls

*P values and odds ratios in validation genotyping were adjusted for age and sex

Genotyping in the replication cohort showed positive association of GD with rs17676303, located upstream of FCRL3 on chromosome 1q23.1 (OR = 1.22, 95 % CI 1.01–1.46, p = 0.04). The minor T allele was more frequent in GD cases than in normal controls (OR = 1.42, 95 % CI 1.22–1.64, p = 3.41 × 10−6) in the combined discovery and replication cohorts, adjusted for sex and age. Rs62469516, rs1469893 and rs78542322 minor alleles were not associated with GD in the replication cohort, or the combined cohorts (Table 3).

Table 3.

Genotyping results for top ranking single nucleotide polymorphisms in replication cohorts, and combined analysis of discovery and replication cohorts using individual genotyping

Replication cohorts (Cases = 539, Controls = 1230) Combined discovery and replication cohorts (Cases = 951, Controls = 1710)
SNP name Location chr and bp Gene A1 F_A F_U P value OR_A1 (95 % CI) F_A F_U P value* OR_A1*
Rs9676286 Chr19q13.43
58126481
ZNF134 intron A 0.045 0.039 0.41 1.17 (0.81–1.71) 0.046 0.034 0.04 1.38 (1.02, 1.87)
rs9644119 Chr8p21.2
26517817
DPYSL2
2124 bp downstream
T 0.219 0.174 9.34 × 10−3 1.28 (1.06–1.54) 0.200 0.161 4.02 × 10−3 1.25 (1.07, 1.45)
rs11722643 Chr4p16.1
10127484
Intergenic
WDR1
upstream, ZNF518B downstream
T 0.096 0.095 0.94 0.99 (0.76–1.29) 0.098 0.083 0.14 1.17 (0.95, 1.44)
Rs686806 Chr 11q22.3
107228533
CWF19L2 intron T 0.198 0.210 0.95 0.99 (0.82, 1.20) 0.217 0.197 0.04 1.63 (1.004, 1.35)
rs62469516 Chr7q21.13
88958624
ZNF804B intron A 0.053 0.053 0.64 1.09 (0.77–1.53) 0.048 0.063 0.06 0.77 (0.59, 1.01)
rs73452600 Chr 7q34
142828104
PIP 1070 bp upstream A 0.090 0.084 0.71 1.05 (0.81, 1.36) 0.094 0.077 0.07 1.22 (0.98–1.50)
Rs1662312 Chr 18p11.31
3220450
MYOM1 upstream A 0.070 0.070 0.77 0.93 (0.59, 1.50) 0.049 0.073 1.72 × 10−3 0.61 (0.44, 0.83)
rs1469893 Chr 15q14
34988664
GJD2
56015 bp
Downstream
A 0.074 0.081 0.72 0.95 (0.71, 1.27) 0.064 0.088 7.29 × 10−3 0.73 (0.57, 0.92)
Rs17676303 Chr 1q23.1
157679691
FCRL3
9044 bp upstream
T 0.233 0.201 0.04 1.22 (1.01–1.46) 0.242 0.186 3.41 × 10−6 1.42 (1.22, 1.64)
rs28578508 Chr18q12.1
32316007
DTNA intron A 0.069 0.083 0.13 0.80 (0.60, 1.07) 0.066 0.087 3.21 × 10−3 0.71 (0.56, 0.89)
rs78542322 Chr 6q14.1
77291670
Intergenic
IMPG1 upstream
HTR1B downstream
T 0.094 0.096 0.89 0.98 (0.76, 1.27) 0.084 0.109 9.45 × 10−3 0.76 (0.62, 0.93)
Rs3818779 Chr 10q26.11
121140671
GRK5 intron A 0.055 0.049 0.58 1.10 (0.78, 1.55) 0.057 0.043 0.06 1.31 (0.99, 1.72)
rs2141440 Chr 11q14.3
90898463
Intergenic MIR4490 and FAT3 A 0.094 0.086 0.53 1.09 (0.84, 1.41) 0.087 0.089 0.88 0.98 (0.80, 1.21)

*P values and odds ratios are adjusted for age and sex

We further examined the relationship between SNP rs17676303 and other annotated SNPs in FCRL3 gene or its promoter region, namely rs7528684, rs3761969 and rs11264798, which have previously been identified as positively associated with GD, rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus [25, 33, 43]. All three SNPs previously associated with GD showed high linkage disequilibrium with rs17676303 in the Caucasian HapMap population (Table 4). The result suggests that these SNPs reported with various auto-immune diseases may be tagging the same functional genetic variants around the FCRL3 gene locus.

Table 4.

Haploview linkage disequilibrium between known susceptibility loci in Graves’ disease and rs17676303 identified in pooled GWAS for Graves’ disease in Hapmap CEU population data

Locus 1 Locus 2 D’ Log of the Odds (LOD) R2 CI low CI High
rs11264798 rs17676303 1.0 4.44 0.142 0.64 1.0
rs3761959 rs17676303 1.0 5.83 0.221 0.71 1.0
rs7528684 rs17676303 1.0 5.73 0.224 0.7 1.0

A second SNP, rs9644119, located downstream of DPYSL2 on chromosome 8p21 is highly ranked for its association with GD in pooled GWAS with a P value approaching genome wide significance (p = 9.10 × 10−8). The association was not validated in the discovery cohort and for the combined cohort the association with GD is less strong than the discovery pooled GWAS would suggest (p = 4.02 × 10−3). In the replication cohort, the minor T allele conferred increased odds for GD compared to controls (OR = 1.33, 95 % CI 1.11–1.59, p = 1.95 × 10−3); after adjusting for sex and age, the result remained significant. (OR = 1.28, 95 % CI 1.06–1.54, p = 9.34 × 10−3). The results suggested this allele might be a genetic locus of interest for GD, but will need further confirmation in future studies.

Discussion

This study investigated the genetic associations of GD using a pooled genome wide association study (GWAS) in 910 samples. Despite the relatively small number of samples for discovery GWAS, the pooled strategy in combination with increased sample size in a second stage of individual genotyping in both the validation and replication cohorts, readily detected evidence of association of a genetic locus upstream of FCRL3 on chromosome 1q23. The association of FCRL3 with GD has previously been identified in large scale GWAS studies [25, 26, 33]. The pooled GWAS also detected association of GD with multiple SNPs within the MHC I and MHC II regions on chromosome 6p21. Susceptibility loci within both these regions which contain HLA genes involved in antigen presentation, are well established for GD by association studies, candidate gene analysis and GWAS [5, 2527, 44]. Rs9272937 in the un-translated region of HLA-DQA1 within the MHC class II region showed evidence of association with GD (p = 4.43 × 10−7) in our study. The positive association of HLA-DQA1 with GD has been replicated in multiple studies [15, 44, 45]. Two SNPs within the intron of the C6orf10 gene suggesting association with GD (p 10−7), were also independently validated as a locus of susceptibility in GD in a previous GWAS study [26].

These replicative findings in GD prove the robustness of the two-stage study design for pooled GWAS. The pooled GWAS study also found evidence of association for a gene locus marked by rs9644119, downstream of DPYSL2 on chromosome 8, but the significance is less certain. The risk attributions from individual genetic variants for GD are known to be small with odds ratios <1.5, [23] therefore large sample sizes in the thousands will be needed to increase power for detecting significant association, and may in the future prove or disprove the significance for the rs9644119 locus.

For the two compelling signals we have detected in the vicinity of FCRL3 and DPYSL2, genetic variants in FCRL3 were associated with a modest increase in odds for GD at 1.2 to 1.35 [25, 33, 46]. Genetic variation in the promoter region of FCRL3 i.e. FCRL3 -169T>C allele is reportedly associated with other autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, [43, 47, 48] suggesting that the FCRL3 locus may influence the susceptibility to multiple autoimmune diseases in a similar manner to the immune regulating CTLA4, PTPN22 and MHC genes [24, 25, 32]. To pinpoint the exact locus associated with FCRL3, the entire FCRL region on chromosome 1q21 was previously investigated using imputation, and the strongest signals associated with GD were located in a cluster of SNPs including rs7528684 and rs3761959 [49]. SNP rs7528684 in the promoter region of FCRL3 was also previously reported as positively associated with rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus and GD [43]. Rs3761959 tagging rs7522061 and rs7528684 in the FCRL3 gene showed association with GD in the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium GWAS study (p = 9.4 × 10−3), and the association was further confirmed by The China Consortium for the Genetics of Autoimmune Thyroid disease, reaching genome wide significance (p = 2.22 × 10−8) [25, 33]. In addition, rs11264798 in FCRL3 was also associated with GD (p = 1.6 × 10−5) [25]. We found high linkage disequilibrium of rs17676303, the SNP associated with GD in our study, with rs7528684, rs3761959 and rs11264798, that strongly suggest these SNPs were tagging the same functional variants in the vicinity of the FCRL3 gene.

Functional analysis suggests FCRL3 has immune regulating roles. FCRL3 is an Fc receptor like molecule that shares a genomic location (chr 1q21-23) and gene structure as a receptor for the Fc portion of immunoglobulin with other members of the immunoglobulin superfamily [50]. Unlike the Fc receptor, the FCRL molecule has not been shown biochemically to bind immunoglobulin [50]. FCRL3 molecules are preferentially expressed by B cells [51, 52]. FCRL3 possesses both tyrosine based activating and inhibitory motifs in its cytoplasmic tail, indicating these may be used to transmit immune-modulatory signals via tyrosine phorphorylation in regulating B cell differentiation and response [50]. The strongest evidence linking FCRL3 polymorphisms with autoimmunity is derived from linkage disequilibrium mapping of the chr1q21-23 region in rheumatoid arthritis, which identified 4 SNPs (rs7528684, rs11264799, rs945635 and rs3761959) in a Japanese population [43]. Of the 4 SNPs positively associated with rheumatoid arthritis, FCRL3 -169T>C (marked by rs7528684 in the promoter region of FCRL3) substitution substantially increased promoter activity in FCRL3 and enhanced binding affinity to the consensus NF-κβ binding motif, where NF-κβ widely regulates genes involved in immune response [43]. In addition, FCRL3 transcripts in peripheral B cells and genomic DNA are higher in heterozygous individuals with genotype -169C/T +358C/G, and increased FCRL3 expression in synovial tissue and peripheral CD19+ B cell population suggest that higher expression of FCRL3 is potentially pathogenic [43]. Further correlation of B cell abnormalities with FCRL3 expression is afforded by significant positive correlation of rheumatoid factor autoantibody titre in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis with the number of susceptible −169 C alleles [43]. However not all studies showed consistent association with polymorphisms in FCRL3, specifically no discernible association with FCRL3 were noted in some other rheumatoid arthritis populations including Caucasians in North American and European countries [5355]. When the susceptibility effect of FCRL3 was stratified by NF-κβ1 genotypes, association of FCRL3 polymorphisms with rheumatoid arthritis was observed in patients heterozygous for the NF-κβ1 promoter in a Spanish population [54].

The second gene of interest, DPYSL2, produces collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2). It was first described in the central nervous system as an effector cytosolic protein for semaphorin mediated axonal growth cones navigation during neural development and plasticity [56]. Dysregulation of CRMP2 phosphorylation and expression, have been associated with neuropsychiatric diseases including Alzheimer’s disease and schizophrenia [56]. CRMP2 is also highly expressed in activated T lymphocytes from peripheral blood bearing CD69 and HLA-DR markers. CRMP2 is distributed in the trailing uropod in polarized T cells binding to cytoskeletal structures particularly to vimentin [57]. The observations of enhanced spontaneous and chemokine-directed T cell transmigration by induced expression of CRMP2 in Jurkat T cells, and high expression of CRMP2 in migrating T cells suggest CRMP2 may regulate T cell motility and migration [57]. The mechanism underlying CRMP2 induced T cell migration seems to involve phosphorylation of CRMP2 Tyr-479 residue, acting as transducer for chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1α (CXCL12) signaling [58]. The discovery of CRMP2 cellular function in T cells defines its potential role in the pathogenesis of immune mediated inflammation, specifically neuroinflammation [59].

Conclusions

In conclusion, the pooled GWAS is an effective methodology for detecting common genetic variants in GD. The study confirmed FCRL3 region as a susceptibility locus for GD in addition to MHC. A second locus downstream of DPYSL2 is potentially a novel genetic variant in GD that requires further confirmation.

Acknowledgements

Drs Peter Colman, Duncan Topliss, Mark Stein, Cherie Chiang, Jennifer Conn, Alan McNab, Thomas Hardy, Richard Stawell, Garry Davis for referring patients to the study. Prof Duncan Topliss for assisting with ethics application at Alfred Health. Ms Stacey Rylander and Mr Chamika De Silva for patients recruitment.

Funding

Ophthalmic Research Institute of Australia (JJK), National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (JC), Australian Research Council Fellowship (SM), National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Fellowship (GM and 1028444 to PNB), Early Career Fellowship (YL), University of Melbourne Early Career Researcher (SS) and Australian Postgraduate Award (JJK). Centre of Eye Research Australia receives operational infrastructure support from the Victorian Government.

Availability of data and material

The dataset supporting the conclusions of this article were included within the article and the supplementary material.

Authors’ contributions

JJK, contributed to conception and design, acquisition, analysis and interpretation of data and manuscript draft preparation. KPB, YL, GWM, SM, JEC contributed to conception and design of the study, analysis and interpretation of data and draft revision. KL, LL contributed to acquisition and processing of data. PNB, SS, JW, AG contributed to acquisition of additional data, and critical revision of manuscript. PRE, PSH, RW, SF, SF, AR, MD, DS contributed to data acquisition and critical manuscript revision. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Consent for publication

No identifiable individual data were contained in this publication.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The study was approved at multiple recruitment sites by the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee, Melbourne Health Human Research Ethics Committee and the Alfred Health Human Research Ethics Committee in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Southern Adelaide Clinical Human Research Ethics Committee and the Royal Adelaide Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee in Adelaide, South Australia. The genetic research was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Written consents to participate were obtained from all patients.

Abbreviations

ATOR

Australian thyroid-associated orbitopathy research

GD

Graves’ disease

GWAS

Genome wide association study

HLA

Human leukocyte antigen

MAF

Minor allele frequency

MHC

Major histo-compatibility complex

PAF

Pooling allele frequency

SNP

Single nucleotide polymorphism

TSHR

Thyrotropin receptor

Additional files

Additional file 1: Table S1. (141.9KB, docx)

Top 30 single nucleotide polymorphism associated with Graves’ disease compared with controls in genome wide association study. This table denoted the top ranking SNPs and highlighted SNPs in major histocompatibility complex region and non-HLA SNPs that were chosen for subsequent validation. (DOCX 141 kb)

Additional file 2: Figure S1. (9.5MB, tif)

Scatterplot for odds ratio of 13 effect allele frequencies comparing pooled GWAS Graves’ disease with individual genotyping in the discovery cohort. This figure showed the correlation between odds ratio derived from pooled GWAS genotyping and individual genotyping in the ATOR discovery cohort; the correlation is high r = 0.89. (TIF 9765 kb)

Contributor Information

Jwu Jin Khong, Email: jwujinkhong@gmail.com.

Kathryn P. Burdon, Email: Kathryn.Burdon@utas.edu.au

Yi Lu, Email: Yi.Lu@qimrberghofer.edu.au.

Kate Laurie, Email: kate@deviationroad.com.

Lefta Leonardos, Email: lefta.leonardos@flinders.edu.au.

Paul N. Baird, Email: pnb@unimelb.edu.au

Srujana Sahebjada, Email: srujana.sahebjada@unimelb.edu.au.

John P. Walsh, Email: John.Walsh@health.wa.gov.au

Adam Gajdatsy, Email: AdamGajdatsy@lei.org.au.

Peter R. Ebeling, Email: peter.ebeling@monash.edu

Peter Shane Hamblin, Email: shanehamblin@hotmail.com.

Rosemary Wong, Email: wong.rose.m@gmail.com.

Simon P. Forehan, Email: forehan@gmail.com

Spiros Fourlanos, Email: Spiros.Fourlanos@mh.org.au.

Anthony P. Roberts, Email: drtony@internode.net.au

Matthew Doogue, Email: mdoogue@gmail.com.

Dinesh Selva, Email: saioph@gmail.com.

Grant W. Montgomery, Email: Grant.Montgomery@qimrberghofer.edu.au

Stuart Macgregor, Email: Stuart.MacGregor@qimrberghofer.edu.au.

Jamie E. Craig, Email: jamie.craig@flinders.edu.au

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