Medicine (RMH) - Research Publications

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    Fine-Mapping the Genetic Association of the Major Histocompatibility Complex in Multiple Sclerosis: HLA and Non-HLA Effects
    Patsopoulos, NA ; Barcellos, LF ; Hintzen, RQ ; Schaefer, C ; Van Duijn, CM ; Noble, JA ; Raj, T ; Gourraud, P-A ; Stranger, BE ; Oksenberg, J ; Olsson, T ; Taylor, BV ; Sawcer, S ; Hafler, DA ; Carrington, M ; De Jager, PL ; De Bakker, PIW ; Gibson, G (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2013-11)
    The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region is strongly associated with multiple sclerosis (MS) susceptibility. HLA-DRB1*15:01 has the strongest effect, and several other alleles have been reported at different levels of validation. Using SNP data from genome-wide studies, we imputed and tested classical alleles and amino acid polymorphisms in 8 classical human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes in 5,091 cases and 9,595 controls. We identified 11 statistically independent effects overall: 6 HLA-DRB1 and one DPB1 alleles in class II, one HLA-A and two B alleles in class I, and one signal in a region spanning from MICB to LST1. This genomic segment does not contain any HLA class I or II genes and provides robust evidence for the involvement of a non-HLA risk allele within the MHC. Interestingly, this region contains the TNF gene, the cognate ligand of the well-validated TNFRSF1A MS susceptibility gene. The classical HLA effects can be explained to some extent by polymorphic amino acid positions in the peptide-binding grooves. This study dissects the independent effects in the MHC, a critical region for MS susceptibility that harbors multiple risk alleles.
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    Responsiveness of the Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life questionnaire to disability change: a longitudinal study
    Baumstarck, K ; Butzkueven, H ; Fernandez, O ; Flachenecker, P ; Stecchi, S ; Idiman, E ; Pelletier, J ; Boucekine, M ; Auquier, P (BMC, 2013-07-29)
    BACKGROUND: Responsiveness, defined as the ability to detect a meaningful change, is a core psychometric property of an instrument measuring quality of life (QoL) rarely reported in multiple sclerosis (MS) studies. OBJECTIVE: To assess the responsiveness of the Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life (MusiQoL) questionnaire to change in disability over 24 months, defined by change in the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score. METHODS: Patients with MS were enrolled into a multicenter, longitudinal observational study. QoL was assessed using both the MusiQoL and the 36-Item Short-Form (SF-36) instruments at baseline and every 6 months thereafter up to month 24; neurological assessments, including EDSS score, were performed at each evaluation. RESULTS: The 24-month EDSS was available for 524 patients. In the 107 worsened patients, two specific dimensions of MusiQoL, the sentimental and sexual life and the relationships with health care system dimensions, and 'physical' scores of SF-36 showed responsiveness. CONCLUSIONS: Whereas specific dimensions of MusiQoL identified EDSS changes, the MusiQoL index did not detect disability changes in worsened MS patients in a 24-month observational study. Future responsiveness validation studies should include longer follow-up and more representative samples.
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    A "Candidate-Interactome" Aggregate Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Data in Multiple Sclerosis
    Mechelli, R ; Umeton, R ; Policano, C ; Annibali, V ; Coarelli, G ; Ricigliano, VAG ; Vittori, D ; Fornasiero, A ; Buscarinu, MC ; Romano, S ; Salvetti, M ; Ristori, G ; Zhang, L (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2013-05-16)
    Though difficult, the study of gene-environment interactions in multifactorial diseases is crucial for interpreting the relevance of non-heritable factors and prevents from overlooking genetic associations with small but measurable effects. We propose a "candidate interactome" (i.e. a group of genes whose products are known to physically interact with environmental factors that may be relevant for disease pathogenesis) analysis of genome-wide association data in multiple sclerosis. We looked for statistical enrichment of associations among interactomes that, at the current state of knowledge, may be representative of gene-environment interactions of potential, uncertain or unlikely relevance for multiple sclerosis pathogenesis: Epstein-Barr virus, human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, cytomegalovirus, HHV8-Kaposi sarcoma, H1N1-influenza, JC virus, human innate immunity interactome for type I interferon, autoimmune regulator, vitamin D receptor, aryl hydrocarbon receptor and a panel of proteins targeted by 70 innate immune-modulating viral open reading frames from 30 viral species. Interactomes were either obtained from the literature or were manually curated. The P values of all single nucleotide polymorphism mapping to a given interactome were obtained from the last genome-wide association study of the International Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Consortium & the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium, 2. The interaction between genotype and Epstein Barr virus emerges as relevant for multiple sclerosis etiology. However, in line with recent data on the coexistence of common and unique strategies used by viruses to perturb the human molecular system, also other viruses have a similar potential, though probably less relevant in epidemiological terms.
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    Persistence on therapy and propensity matched outcome comparison of two subcutaneous interferon beta 1a dosages for multiple sclerosis.
    Kalincik, T ; Spelman, T ; Trojano, M ; Duquette, P ; Izquierdo, G ; Grammond, P ; Lugaresi, A ; Hupperts, R ; Cristiano, E ; Van Pesch, V ; Grand'maison, F ; La Spitaleri, D ; Rio, ME ; Flechter, S ; Oreja-Guevara, C ; Giuliani, G ; Savino, A ; Amato, MP ; Petersen, T ; Fernandez-Bolanos, R ; Bergamaschi, R ; Iuliano, G ; Boz, C ; Lechner-Scott, J ; Deri, N ; Gray, O ; Verheul, F ; Fiol, M ; Barnett, M ; van Munster, E ; Santiago, V ; Moore, F ; Slee, M ; Saladino, ML ; Alroughani, R ; Shaw, C ; Kasa, K ; Petkovska-Boskova, T ; den Braber-Moerland, L ; Chapman, J ; Skromne, E ; Herbert, J ; Poehlau, D ; Needham, M ; Bacile, EAB ; Arruda, WO ; Paine, M ; Singhal, B ; Vucic, S ; Cabrera-Gomez, JA ; Butzkueven, H ; MSBase Study Group, ; Derfuss, T (Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2013)
    OBJECTIVES: To compare treatment persistence between two dosages of interferon β-1a in a large observational multiple sclerosis registry and assess disease outcomes of first line MS treatment at these dosages using propensity scoring to adjust for baseline imbalance in disease characteristics. METHODS: Treatment discontinuations were evaluated in all patients within the MSBase registry who commenced interferon β-1a SC thrice weekly (n = 4678). Furthermore, we assessed 2-year clinical outcomes in 1220 patients treated with interferon β-1a in either dosage (22 µg or 44 µg) as their first disease modifying agent, matched on propensity score calculated from pre-treatment demographic and clinical variables. A subgroup analysis was performed on 456 matched patients who also had baseline MRI variables recorded. RESULTS: Overall, 4054 treatment discontinuations were recorded in 3059 patients. The patients receiving the lower interferon dosage were more likely to discontinue treatment than those with the higher dosage (25% vs. 20% annual probability of discontinuation, respectively). This was seen in discontinuations with reasons recorded as "lack of efficacy" (3.3% vs. 1.7%), "scheduled stop" (2.2% vs. 1.3%) or without the reason recorded (16.7% vs. 13.3% annual discontinuation rate, 22 µg vs. 44 µg dosage, respectively). Propensity score was determined by treating centre and disability (score without MRI parameters) or centre, sex and number of contrast-enhancing lesions (score including MRI parameters). No differences in clinical outcomes at two years (relapse rate, time relapse-free and disability) were observed between the matched patients treated with either of the interferon dosages. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment discontinuations were more common in interferon β-1a 22 µg SC thrice weekly. However, 2-year clinical outcomes did not differ between patients receiving the different dosages, thus replicating in a registry dataset derived from "real-world" database the results of the pivotal randomised trial. Propensity score matching effectively minimised baseline covariate imbalance between two directly compared sub-populations from a large observational registry.
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    Identity-by-Descent Mapping to Detect Rare Variants Conferring Susceptibility to Multiple Sclerosis
    Lin, R ; Charlesworth, J ; Stankovich, J ; Perreau, VM ; Brown, MA ; Taylor, BV ; Toland, AE (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2013-03-05)
    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified around 60 common variants associated with multiple sclerosis (MS), but these loci only explain a fraction of the heritability of MS. Some missing heritability may be caused by rare variants that have been suggested to play an important role in the aetiology of complex diseases such as MS. However current genetic and statistical methods for detecting rare variants are expensive and time consuming. 'Population-based linkage analysis' (PBLA) or so called identity-by-descent (IBD) mapping is a novel way to detect rare variants in extant GWAS datasets. We employed BEAGLE fastIBD to search for rare MS variants utilising IBD mapping in a large GWAS dataset of 3,543 cases and 5,898 controls. We identified a genome-wide significant linkage signal on chromosome 19 (LOD = 4.65; p = 1.9×10(-6)). Network analysis of cases and controls sharing haplotypes on chromosome 19 further strengthened the association as there are more large networks of cases sharing haplotypes than controls. This linkage region includes a cluster of zinc finger genes of unknown function. Analysis of genome wide transcriptome data suggests that genes in this zinc finger cluster may be involved in very early developmental regulation of the CNS. Our study also indicates that BEAGLE fastIBD allowed identification of rare variants in large unrelated population with moderate computational intensity. Even with the development of whole-genome sequencing, IBD mapping still may be a promising way to narrow down the region of interest for sequencing priority.
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    Optic Nerve Diffusion Tensor Imaging after Acute Optic Neuritis Predicts Axonal and Visual Outcomes
    van der Walt, A ; Kolbe, SC ; Wang, YE ; Klistorner, A ; Shuey, N ; Ahmadi, G ; Paine, M ; Marriott, M ; Mitchell, P ; Egan, GF ; Butzkueven, H ; Kilpatrick, TJ ; Villoslada, P (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2013-12-26)
    BACKGROUND: Early markers of axonal and clinical outcomes are required for early phase testing of putative neuroprotective therapies for multiple sclerosis (MS). OBJECTIVES: To assess whether early measurement of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) parameters (axial and radial diffusivity) within the optic nerve during and after acute demyelinating optic neuritis (ON) could predict axonal (retinal nerve fibre layer thinning and multi-focal visual evoked potential amplitude reduction) or clinical (visual acuity and visual field loss) outcomes at 6 or 12 months. METHODS: Thirty-seven patients presenting with acute, unilateral ON were studied at baseline, one, three, six and 12 months using optic nerve DTI, clinical and paraclinical markers of axonal injury and clinical visual dysfunction. RESULTS: Affected nerve axial diffusivity (AD) was reduced at baseline, 1 and 3 months. Reduced 1-month AD correlated with retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thinning at 6 (R=0.38, p=0.04) and 12 months (R=0.437, p=0.008) and VEP amplitude loss at 6 (R=0.414, p=0.019) and 12 months (R=0.484, p=0.003). AD reduction at three months correlated with high contrast visual acuity at 6 (ρ = -0.519, p = 0.001) and 12 months (ρ = -0.414, p=0.011). The time-course for AD reduction for each patient was modelled using a quadratic regression. AD normalised after a median of 18 weeks and longer normalisation times were associated with more pronounced RNFL thinning and mfVEP amplitude loss at 12 months. Affected nerve radial diffusivity (RD) was unchanged until three months, after which time it remained elevated. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that AD reduces during acute ON. One month AD reduction correlates with the extent of axonal loss and persistent AD reduction at 3 months predicts poorer visual outcomes. This suggests that acute ON therapies that normalise optic nerve AD by 3 months could also promote axon survival and improve visual outcomes.
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    Estimation and partitioning of polygenic variation captured by common SNPs for Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis and endometriosis
    Lee, SH ; Harold, D ; Nyholt, DR ; Goddard, ME ; Zondervan, KT ; Williams, J ; Montgomery, GW ; Wray, NR ; Visscher, PM (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2013-02-15)
    Common diseases such as endometriosis (ED), Alzheimer's disease (AD) and multiple sclerosis (MS) account for a significant proportion of the health care burden in many countries. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) for these diseases have identified a number of individual genetic variants contributing to the risk of those diseases. However, the effect size for most variants is small and collectively the known variants explain only a small proportion of the estimated heritability. We used a linear mixed model to fit all single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) simultaneously, and estimated genetic variances on the liability scale using SNPs from GWASs in unrelated individuals for these three diseases. For each of the three diseases, case and control samples were not all genotyped in the same laboratory. We demonstrate that a careful analysis can obtain robust estimates, but also that insufficient quality control (QC) of SNPs can lead to spurious results and that too stringent QC is likely to remove real genetic signals. Our estimates show that common SNPs on commercially available genotyping chips capture significant variation contributing to liability for all three diseases. The estimated proportion of total variation tagged by all SNPs was 0.26 (SE 0.04) for ED, 0.24 (SE 0.03) for AD and 0.30 (SE 0.03) for MS. Further, we partitioned the genetic variance explained into five categories by a minor allele frequency (MAF), by chromosomes and gene annotation. We provide strong evidence that a substantial proportion of variation in liability is explained by common SNPs, and thereby give insights into the genetic architecture of the diseases.
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    Resequencing and fine-mapping of the chromosome 12q13-14 locus associated with multiple sclerosis refines the number of implicated genes
    Cortes, A ; Field, J ; Glazov, EA ; Hadler, J ; Stankovich, J ; Brown, MA (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2013-06-01)
    Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a common chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system. Susceptibility to the disease is affected by both environmental and genetic factors. Genetic factors include haplotypes in the histocompatibility complex (MHC) and over 50 non-MHC loci reported by genome-wide association studies. Amongst these, we previously reported polymorphisms in chromosome 12q13-14 with a protective effect in individuals of European descent. This locus spans 288 kb and contains 17 genes, including several candidate genes which have potentially significant pathogenic and therapeutic implications. In this study, we aimed to fine-map this locus. We have implemented a two-phase study: a variant discovery phase where we have used next-generation sequencing and two target-enrichment strategies [long-range polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Nimblegen's solution phase hybridization capture] in pools of 25 samples; and a genotyping phase where we genotyped 712 variants in 3577 healthy controls and 3269 MS patients. This study confirmed the association (rs2069502, P = 9.9 × 10(-11), OR = 0.787) and narrowed down the locus of association to an 86.5 kb region. Although the study was unable to pinpoint the key-associated variant, we have identified a 42 (genotyped and imputed) single-nucleotide polymorphism haplotype block likely to harbour the causal variant. No evidence of association at previously reported low-frequency variants in CYP27B1 was observed. As part of the study we compared variant discovery performance using two target-enrichment strategies. We concluded that our pools enriched with Nimblegen's solution phase hybridization capture had better sensitivity to detect true variants than the pools enriched with long-range PCR, whilst specificity was better in the long-range PCR-enriched pools compared with solution phase hybridization capture enriched pools; this result has important implications for the design of future fine-mapping studies.
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    Analysis of immune-related loci identifies 48 new susceptibility variants for multiple sclerosis
    Beecham, AH ; Patsopoulos, NA ; Xifara, DK ; Davis, MF ; Kemppinen, A ; Cotsapas, C ; Shah, TS ; Spencer, C ; Booth, D ; Goris, A ; Oturai, A ; Saarela, J ; Fontaine, B ; Hemmer, B ; Martin, C ; Zipp, F ; D'Alfonso, S ; Martinelli-Boneschi, F ; Taylor, B ; Harbo, HF ; Kockum, I ; Hillert, J ; Olsson, T ; Ban, M ; Oksenberg, JR ; Hintzen, R ; Barcellos, LF ; Agliardi, C ; Alfredsson, L ; Alizadeh, M ; Anderson, C ; Andrews, R ; Sondergaard, HB ; Baker, A ; Band, G ; Baranzini, SE ; Barizzone, N ; Barrett, J ; Bellenguez, C ; Bergamaschi, L ; Bernardinelli, L ; Berthele, A ; Biberacher, V ; Binder, TMC ; Blackburn, H ; Bomfim, IL ; Brambilla, P ; Broadley, S ; Brochet, B ; Brundin, L ; Buck, D ; Butzkueven, H ; Caillier, SJ ; Camu, W ; Carpentier, W ; Cavalla, P ; Celius, EG ; Coman, I ; Comi, G ; Corrado, L ; Cosemans, L ; Cournu-Rebeix, I ; Cree, BAC ; Cusi, D ; Damotte, V ; Defer, G ; Delgado, SR ; Deloukas, P ; di Sapio, A ; Dilthey, AT ; Donnelly, P ; Dubois, B ; Duddy, M ; Edkins, S ; Elovaara, I ; Esposito, F ; Evangelou, N ; Fiddes, B ; Field, J ; Franke, A ; Freeman, C ; Frohlich, IY ; Galimberti, D ; Gieger, C ; Gourraud, P-A ; Graetz, C ; Graham, A ; Grummel, V ; Guaschino, C ; Hadjixenofontos, A ; Hakonarson, H ; Halfpenny, C ; Hall, G ; Hall, P ; Hamsten, A ; Harley, J ; Harrower, T ; Hawkins, C ; Hellenthal, G ; Hillier, C ; Hobart, J ; Hoshi, M ; Hunt, SE ; Jagodic, M ; Jelcic, I ; Jochim, A ; Kendall, B ; Kermode, A ; Kilpatrick, T ; Koivisto, K ; Konidari, I ; Korn, T ; Kronsbein, H ; Langford, C ; Larsson, M ; Lathrop, M ; Lebrun-Frenay, C ; Lechner-Scott, J ; Lee, MH ; Leone, MA ; Leppa, V ; Liberatore, G ; Lie, BA ; Lill, CM ; Linden, M ; Link, J ; Luessi, F ; Lycke, J ; Macciardi, F ; Mannisto, S ; Manrique, CP ; Martin, R ; Martinelli, V ; Mason, D ; Mazibrada, G ; McCabe, C ; Mero, I-L ; Mescheriakova, J ; Moutsianas, L ; Myhr, K-M ; Nagels, G ; Nicholas, R ; Nilsson, P ; Piehl, F ; Pirinen, M ; Price, SE ; Quach, H ; Reunanen, M ; Robberecht, W ; Robertson, NP ; Rodegher, M ; Rog, D ; Salvetti, M ; Schnetz-Boutaud, NC ; Sellebjerg, F ; Selter, RC ; Schaefer, C ; Shaunak, S ; Shen, L ; Shields, S ; Siffrin, V ; Slee, M ; Sorensen, PS ; Sorosina, M ; Sospedra, M ; Spurkland, A ; Strange, A ; Sundqvist, E ; Thijs, V ; Thorpe, J ; Ticca, A ; Tienari, P ; van Duijn, C ; Visser, EM ; Vucic, S ; Westerlind, H ; Wiley, JS ; Wilkins, A ; Wilson, JF ; Winkelmann, J ; Zajicek, J ; Zindler, E ; Haines, JL ; Pericak-Vance, MA ; Ivinson, AJ ; Stewart, G ; Hafler, D ; Hauser, SL ; Compston, A ; McVean, G ; De Jager, P ; Sawcer, SJ ; McCauley, JL (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2013-11)
    Using the ImmunoChip custom genotyping array, we analyzed 14,498 subjects with multiple sclerosis and 24,091 healthy controls for 161,311 autosomal variants and identified 135 potentially associated regions (P < 1.0 × 10(-4)). In a replication phase, we combined these data with previous genome-wide association study (GWAS) data from an independent 14,802 subjects with multiple sclerosis and 26,703 healthy controls. In these 80,094 individuals of European ancestry, we identified 48 new susceptibility variants (P < 5.0 × 10(-8)), 3 of which we found after conditioning on previously identified variants. Thus, there are now 110 established multiple sclerosis risk variants at 103 discrete loci outside of the major histocompatibility complex. With high-resolution Bayesian fine mapping, we identified five regions where one variant accounted for more than 50% of the posterior probability of association. This study enhances the catalog of multiple sclerosis risk variants and illustrates the value of fine mapping in the resolution of GWAS signals.
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    Endogenously regulated Dab2 worsens inflammatory injury in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis
    Jokubaitis, VG ; Gresle, MM ; Kemper, DA ; Doherty, W ; Perreau, VM ; Cipriani, TL ; Jonas, A ; Shaw, G ; Kuhlmann, T ; Kilpatrick, TJ ; Butzkueven, H (BIOMED CENTRAL LTD, 2013)
    BACKGROUND: Neuroinflammation regulates both disease pathogenesis and repair in multiple sclerosis. In early multiple sclerosis lesion development, neuroinflammation causes demyelination and axonal injury, the likely final common determinant of disability. Here we report the identification of a novel neuroinflammatory mediator, Disabled-2 (Dab2). Dab2 is an intracellular adaptor protein with previously unknown function in the central nervous system. RESULTS: We report that Dab2 is up-regulated in lesional macrophages/microglia in the spinal cord in murine experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a model of multiple sclerosis. We demonstrate that dab2 expression is positively correlated with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis disease severity during the acute disease phase. Furthermore, dab2-deficient mice have a less severe experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis disease course and suffer less neuroinflammation and less axonal injury than their wild-type littermates. We demonstrate that dab2 expression is strongly associated with the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase. We further demonstrate that Dab2 is expressed at the protein level by macrophages in early acute human multiple sclerosis lesions and that this correlates with axonal injury. CONCLUSIONS: Together, these results suggest that endogenous Dab2 exacerbates central nervous system inflammation, potentially acting to up-regulate reactive oxygen species expression in macrophages and microglia, and that it is of potential pathogenic relevance in Multiple Sclerosis.