학술논문

Insights into the genetic architecture of osteoarthritis from stage 1 of the arcOGEN study
Document Type
article
Source
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 70(5)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Arthritis
Genetics
Prevention
Aging
Human Genome
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Musculoskeletal
Case-Control Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Multifactorial Inheritance
Osteoarthritis
Hip
Osteoarthritis
Knee
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
arcOGEN Consortium
Public Health and Health Services
Arthritis & Rheumatology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesThe genetic aetiology of osteoarthritis has not yet been elucidated. To enable a well-powered genome-wide association study (GWAS) for osteoarthritis, the authors have formed the arcOGEN Consortium, a UK-wide collaborative effort aiming to scan genome-wide over 7500 osteoarthritis cases in a two-stage genome-wide association scan. Here the authors report the findings of the stage 1 interim analysis.MethodsThe authors have performed a genome-wide association scan for knee and hip osteoarthritis in 3177 cases and 4894 population-based controls from the UK. Replication of promising signals was carried out in silico in five further scans (44,449 individuals), and de novo in 14 534 independent samples, all of European descent.ResultsNone of the association signals the authors identified reach genome-wide levels of statistical significance, therefore stressing the need for corroboration in sample sets of a larger size. Application of analytical approaches to examine the allelic architecture of disease to the stage 1 genome-wide association scan data suggests that osteoarthritis is a highly polygenic disease with multiple risk variants conferring small effects.ConclusionsIdentifying loci conferring susceptibility to osteoarthritis will require large-scale sample sizes and well-defined phenotypes to minimise heterogeneity.