AI Article Synopsis

  • Autoimmune Addison's disease (AAD) is the main cause of primary adrenal failure, and while it has high heritability, its rarity has limited genetic research to candidate-gene studies.
  • A comprehensive study investigated risk loci and over 1800 candidate genes in 479 AAD patients and 2394 controls, confirming some previous risk variants while disproving others.
  • The research identified a new risk locus in the autoimmune regulator gene (AIRE) and highlighted that the known risk loci only account for about 7% of the genetic risk for AAD in the population studied.

Article Abstract

Autoimmune Addison's disease (AAD) is the predominating cause of primary adrenal failure. Despite its high heritability, the rarity of disease has long made candidate-gene studies the only feasible methodology for genetic studies. Here we conducted a comprehensive reinvestigation of suggested AAD risk loci and more than 1800 candidate genes with associated regulatory elements in 479 patients with AAD and 2394 controls. Our analysis enabled us to replicate many risk variants, but several other previously suggested risk variants failed confirmation. By exploring the full set of 1800 candidate genes, we further identified common variation in the autoimmune regulator (AIRE) as a novel risk locus associated to sporadic AAD in our study. Our findings not only confirm that multiple loci are associated with disease risk, but also show to what extent the multiple risk loci jointly associate to AAD. In total, risk loci discovered to date only explain about 7% of variance in liability to AAD in our study population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5976627PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-26842-2DOI Listing

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