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Galactosylation of IgA1 Is Associated with Common Variation in C1GALT1.

journal contribution
posted on 2017-03-10, 13:03 authored by Daniel P. Gale, Karen Molyneux, David Wimbury, Patricia Higgins, Adam P. Levine, Ben Caplin, Anna Ferlin, Peiran Yin, Christopher P. Nelson, Horia Stanescu, Nilesh J. Samani, Robert Kleta, Xueqing Yu, Jonathan Barratt
IgA nephropathy (IgAN), an important cause of kidney failure, is characterized by glomerular IgA deposition and is associated with changes in O-glycosylation of the IgA1 molecule. Here, we sought to identify genetic factors contributing to levels of galactose-deficient IgA1 (Gd-IgA1) in white and Chinese populations. Gd-IgA1 levels were elevated in IgAN patients compared with ethnically matched healthy subjects and correlated with evidence of disease progression. White patients with IgAN exhibited significantly higher Gd-IgA1 levels than did Chinese patients. Among individuals without IgAN, Gd-IgA1 levels did not correlate with kidney function. Gd-IgA1 level heritability (h(2)), estimated by comparing midparental and offspring Gd-IgA1 levels, was 0.39. Genome-wide association analysis by linear regression identified alleles at a single locus spanning the C1GALT1 gene that strongly associated with Gd-IgA1 level (β=0.26; P=2.35×10(-9)). This association was replicated in a genome-wide association study of separate cohorts comprising 308 patients with membranous GN from the UK (P<1.00×10(-6)) and 622 controls with normal kidney function from the UK (P<1.00×10(-10)), and in a candidate gene study of 704 Chinese patients with IgAN (P<1.00×10(-5)). The same extended haplotype associated with elevated Gd-IgA1 levels in all cohorts studied. C1GALT1 encodes a galactosyltransferase enzyme that is important in O-galactosylation of glycoproteins. These findings demonstrate that common variation at C1GALT1 influences Gd-IgA1 level in the population, which independently associates with risk of progressive IgAN, and that the pathogenic importance of changes in IgA1 O-glycosylation may vary between white and Chinese patients with IgAN.

Funding

This study was supported by a UK National Institute for Health Research Translational Research Collaboration in Rare Disease Grant, TheMayer Family Trust, and Kidney Research UK. D.P.G. is supported by the Medical Research Council. C.P.N. and N.J.S. are supported by the British Heart Foundation and N.J.S. is a UK National Institute for Health Research Senior Investigator.

History

Citation

Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2017

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of the American Society of Nephrology

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology

issn

1046-6673

eissn

1533-3450

Acceptance date

2017-01-10

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2017-03-10

Publisher version

http://jasn.asnjournals.org/content/early/2017/02/15/ASN.2016091043

Language

en

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