variants contribute to FSGS susceptibility across multiple populations.
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Abstract | Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a common cause of nephrotic syndrome with an annual incidence in the United States in African-Americans compared to European-Americans of 24 cases and 5 cases per million, respectively. Among glomerular diseases in Europe and Latin-America, FSGS was the second most frequent diagnosis, and in Asia the fifth. We expand previous efforts in understanding genetics of FSGS by performing a case-control study involving ethnically-diverse groups FSGS cases (726) and a pool of controls (13,994), using panel sequencing of approximately 2,500 podocyte-expressed genes. Through rare variant association tests, we replicated known risk genes - , and . A novel significant association was observed for the gene encoding complement receptor 1 (). High-risk rare variants in in the European-American cohort were commonly observed in Latin- and African-Americans. Therefore, a combined rare and common variant analysis was used to replicate the association in non-European populations. The risk variant, rs17047661, gives rise to the Sl1/Sl2 (R1601G) allele that was previously associated with protection against cerebral malaria. Pleiotropic effects of rs17047661 may explain the difference in allele frequencies across continental ancestries and suggest a possible role for genetically-driven alterations of adaptive immunity in the pathogenesis of FSGS. |
Year of Publication | 2023
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Journal | medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
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Date Published | 11/2023
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DOI | 10.1101/2023.11.20.23298462
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PubMed ID | 38076851
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