Background And Purpose: Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) have altered T cell function and composition. Common genetic risk variants for MS affect proteins that function in the immune system. It is currently unclear to what extent T cell composition is affected by genetic risk factors for MS, and how this may precede a possible disease onset. Here, we aim to assess whether an MS polygenic risk score (PRS) is associated with an altered T cell composition in a large cohort of children from the general population.
Methods: We included genotyped participants from the population-based Generation R study in whom immunophenotyping of blood T cells was performed at the age of 6 years. Analyses of variance were used to determine the impact of MS-PRSs on total T cell numbers (n = 1261), CD4 and CD8 lineages, and subsets therein (n= 675). In addition, T-cell-specific PRSs were constructed based on functional pathway data.
Results: The MS-PRS negatively correlated with CD8 T cell frequencies (p = 2.92 × 10 ), which resulted in a positive association with CD4 /CD8 T cell ratios (p = 8.27 × 10 ). These associations were mainly driven by two of 195 genome-wide significant MS risk variants: the main genetic risk variant for MS, HLA-DRB1*15:01 and an HLA-B risk variant. We observed no significant associations for the T-cell-specific PRSs.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that MS-associated genetic variants affect T cell composition during childhood in the general population.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ene.15019 | DOI Listing |
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