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Autophagy and inflammatory bowel disease: Association between variants of the autophagy-related IRGM gene and susceptibility to Crohn's disease. | LitMetric

Background: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are inflammatory bowel diseases involving a genetically determined inappropriate mucosal immune response towards luminal antigens, including resident bacterial flora. Recent studies identified susceptibility genes involved in autophagy.

Aims: We analyzed known autophagic loci (IRGM, ULK1 and AMBRA1) previously described as associated with inflammatory bowel diseases or with other autoimmune and/or inflammatory disorders in a sample of Italian inflammatory bowel diseases patients in order to confirm their possible involvement and relative contribution in the disease.

Methods: We performed a case-control association study, a sub-phenotype correlation and a haplotype analysis. The analysis included 263 Crohn's disease, 206 ulcerative colitis patients and 245 matched healthy controls. Five polymorphisms were genotyped by allelic discrimination assays.

Results: IRGM was the most strongly associated with Crohn's disease susceptibility [rs13361189: P=0.011, OR=1.66 [95% CI: (1.12-2.45)]; rs4958847: P=0.05, OR=1.43 [95% CI: (1-2.03)]. The SNP rs13361189 was also found to increase the risk of Crohn's disease clinical sub-phenotype (fibrostricturing behaviour, ileal disease, perianal disease, intestinal resection). These findings suggest that IRGM variants may modulate clinical characteristics of Crohn's disease.

Conclusions: Our study confirms IRGM rs13361189 and rs4958847 polymorphisms to be important for Crohn's disease susceptibility and phenotype modulation, in accordance with previous findings.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dld.2015.05.012DOI Listing

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