rs117754460 - ZNF728
Magnitude 4.5 · 1 study on file
Reported associations
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GWAS of Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria Reveals Genetic Overlap with Autoimmune Diseases, Not Atopic Diseases. - The Journal of investigative dermatology (2022) · Zhang L, Qiu L, Wu J, Qi Y, Gao X, He C, Qi R, Wang H, Yao X, Zhu H, Li Y, Hao S, Lu Q, Long H, Lian S, Zhu W, Zhang H, Lai W, Su X, Lu R, Guo Z, Li J, Li M, Liu Q, Wang H, He L, Nong X, Li F, Li Y, Yao C, Xu J, Tang H, Wang D, Li Z, Yu H, Xiao S, An J, Pu X, Yu S, Zhang J, Chen X, Wang H, Huang W, Chen H, Xiao T · PubMed 35933036
Although chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is a common disease, GWASs of CSU are lacking. We aimed to identify susceptibility SNPs by performing a GWAS in Chinese Han adults with CSU. The discovery cohort included 430 CSU cases and 482 healthy controls. The GWAS findings were validated in 800 CSU cases and 900 healthy controls. Genetic, functional enrichment, and bioinformatic analyses of genome-wide significant SNPs were performed to assess the association between CSU and autoimmunity or atopy. Five genome-wide significant SNPs were identified: rs434124/LILRA3, rs61986182/IGHG1/2, rs73075571/TDGF1, rs9378141/HLA-G, and rs3789612/PTPN22. The first four SNPs were in linkage disequilibrium with autoimmune-related diseases‒associated SNPs and were cis-expression quantitative trait loci in
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