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Variants in the DDX6-CXCR5 autoimmune disease risk locus influence the regulatory network in immune cells and salivary gland
Genes and Human Disease Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), OK, Oklahoma City, United States.
Genes and Human Disease Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), OK, Oklahoma City, United States; University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, OK, Oklahoma City, United States.
Genes and Human Disease Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), OK, Oklahoma City, United States.
Genes and Human Disease Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), OK, Oklahoma City, United States; Arthritis and Clinical Immunology Research Program, OMRF, OK, Oklahoma City, United States.
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2025 (English)In: Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, ISSN 0003-4967, E-ISSN 1468-2060Article in journal (Refereed) Epub ahead of print
Abstract [en]

Objectives: Sjögren's disease (SjD) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) share genetic risk at the DDX6-CXCR5 locus (11q23.3). Identifying and functionally characterising shared SNPs spanning this locus can provide new insights into common genetic mechanisms of autoimmunity.

Methods: Transdisease meta-analyses, fine-mapping, and bioinformatic analyses prioritised shared likely functional single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for allele-specific and cell type–specific functional interrogation using electromobility shift, luciferase reporter, and quantitative chromatin conformation capture assays and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) gene regulation.

Results: Five shared SNPs were identified as likely functional in primary human immune cells, salivary gland and kidney tissues: rs57494551, rs4936443, rs4938572, rs7117261, and rs4938573. All 5 SNPs exhibited cell type-specific and allele-specific effects on nuclear protein binding affinity and enhancer/promoter regulatory activity in immune, salivary gland epithelial, and kidney epithelial cell models. Mapping of chromatin–chromatin interactions revealed a chromatin regulatory network that expanded beyond DDX6 and CXCR5 to include PHLDB1, lnc-PHLDB1-1, BCL9L, TRAPPC4, among others. Coalescence of functional assays and multiomic data analyses indicated that these SNPs likely modulate the activity of 3 regulatory regions: intronic rs57494551 regulatory region, intergenic SNP haplotype (rs4938572, rs4936443, and rs7117261) regulatory region, and rs4938573 regulatory region upstream of the CXCR5 promoter.

Conclusions: Shared genetic susceptibly at the DDX6-CXCR5 locus in SjD and SLE likely alters common mechanisms of autoimmunity, including interferon signalling (DDX6), autophagy (TRAPPC4), and lymphocytic infiltration of disease-target tissues (CXCR5). Further, using multiomic data from patients with SjD, combined with bioinformatic and in vitro functional studies, can provide mechanistic insights into how genetic risk influences the biological pathways that drive complex autoimmunity.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2025.
National Category
Medical Genetics and Genomics Rheumatology Autoimmunity and Inflammation
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-239821DOI: 10.1016/j.ard.2025.04.023PubMedID: 40447495Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-105007095088OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-239821DiVA, id: diva2:1971287
Funder
Stiftelsen Konung Gustaf V:s 80-årsfondKnut and Alice Wallenberg FoundationStockholm County CouncilSwedish Cancer SocietySwedish Heart Lung FoundationSwedish Research Council, 2017-000641Swedish Rheumatism AssociationSwedish Society of MedicineTorsten Söderbergs stiftelse
Note

Available from: 2025-06-17 Created: 2025-06-17 Last updated: 2025-06-17

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Forsblad-d'Elia, Helena

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