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Genome-wide association study of biologically informed periodontal complex traits offers novel insights into the genetic basis of periodontal disease.

TitleGenome-wide association study of biologically informed periodontal complex traits offers novel insights into the genetic basis of periodontal disease.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsOffenbacher S, Divaris K, Barros SP, Moss KL, Marchesan JT, Morelli T, Zhang S, Kim S, Sun L, Beck JD, Laudes M, Munz M, Schaefer AS
Secondary AuthorsNorth KE
JournalHum Mol Genet
Volume25
Issue10
Pagination2113-2129
Date Published2016 05 15
ISSN1460-2083
KeywordsChronic Periodontitis, Female, Genome-Wide Association Study, Germany, Gingival Crevicular Fluid, Humans, Inflammation, Interleukin-1beta, Male, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Periodontal Diseases, Phenotype, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Principal Component Analysis, SAP90-PSD95 Associated Proteins, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of chronic periodontitis (CP) defined by clinical criteria alone have had modest success to-date. Here, we refine the CP phenotype by supplementing clinical data with biological intermediates of microbial burden (levels of eight periodontal pathogens) and local inflammatory response (gingival crevicular fluid IL-1β) and derive periodontal complex traits (PCTs) via principal component analysis. PCTs were carried forward to GWAS (∼2.5 million markers) to identify PCT-associated loci among 975 European American adult participants of the Dental ARIC study. We sought to validate these findings for CP in the larger ARIC cohort (n = 821 participants with severe CP, 2031-moderate CP, 1914-healthy/mild disease) and an independent German sample including 717 aggressive periodontitis cases and 4210 controls. We identified six PCTs with distinct microbial community/IL-1β structures, although with overlapping clinical presentations. PCT1 was characterized by a uniformly high pathogen load, whereas PCT3 and PCT5 were dominated by Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans and Porphyromonas gingivalis, respectively. We detected genome-wide significant signals for PCT1 (CLEC19A, TRA, GGTA2P, TM9SF2, IFI16, RBMS3), PCT4 (HPVC1) and PCT5 (SLC15A4, PKP2, SNRPN). Overall, the highlighted loci included genes associated with immune response and epithelial barrier function. With the exception of associations of BEGAIN with severe and UBE3D with moderate CP, no other loci were associated with CP in ARIC or aggressive periodontitis in the German sample. Although not associated with current clinically determined periodontal disease taxonomies, upon replication and mechanistic validation these candidate loci may highlight dysbiotic microbial community structures and altered inflammatory/immune responses underlying biological sub-types of CP.

DOI10.1093/hmg/ddw069
Alternate JournalHum Mol Genet
PubMed ID26962152
PubMed Central IDPMC5062586
Grant ListK23 DE025093 / DE / NIDCR NIH HHS / United States
R90 DE022527 / DE / NIDCR NIH HHS / United States
T90 DE021986 / DE / NIDCR NIH HHS / United States