Authors
Gordan Lauc
Jennifer E. Huffman
Maja Pucic
Lina Zgaga
Barbara Adamczyk
Ana Muzinic
Mislav Novokmet
Ozren Polasek
Olga Gornik
Jasminka Kristic
Toma Keser
Veronique Vitart
Blanca Scheijen
Hae-Won Uh
Mariam Molokhia
Alan L. Patrick
Paul McKeigue
Ivana Kolcic
Ivan K. Lukic
Olivia Swann
Frank N. van Leeuwen
L. R. Ruhaak
Jeanine J. Houwing-Duistermaat
P. E. Slagboom
Marian Beekman
Anton J.M. de Craen
Andre M. Deelder
Qiang Zeng
Wei Wang, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Nicholas D. Hastie
Ulf Gyllensten
James F. Wilson
Manfred Wuhrer
Alan F. Wright
Pauline M. Rudd
Caroline Hayward
Yurii Aulchenko
Harry Campbell
Igor Rudan
Document Type
Journal Article
Publisher
PLOS
Faculty
Faculty of Computing, Health and Science
School
School of Medical Sciences
RAS ID
15909
Abstract
Glycosylation of immunoglobulin G (IgG) influences IgG effector function by modulating binding to Fc receptors. To identify genetic loci associated with IgG glycosylation, we quantitated N-linked IgG glycans using two approaches. After isolating IgG from human plasma, we performed 77 quantitative measurements of N-glycosylation using ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) in 2,247 individuals from four European discovery populations. In parallel, we measured IgG N-glycans using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) in a replication cohort of 1,848 Europeans. Meta-analysis of genome-wide association study (GWAS) results identified 9 genome-wide significant loci (P,2.2761029) in the discovery analysis and two of the same loci (B4GALT1 and MGAT3) in the replication cohort. Four loci contained genes encoding glycosyltransferases (ST6GAL1, B4GALT1, FUT8, and MGAT3), while the remaining 5 contained genes that have not been previously implicated in protein glycosylation (IKZF1, IL6ST-ANKRD55, ABCF2- SMARCD3, SUV420H1, and SMARCB1-DERL3). However, most of them have been strongly associated with autoimmune and inflammatory conditions (e.g., systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, diabetes type 1, multiple sclerosis, Graves’ disease, celiac disease, nodular sclerosis) and/or haematological cancers (acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma). Follow-up functional experiments in haplodeficient Ikzf1 knock-out mice showed the same general pattern of changes in IgG glycosylation as identified in the meta-analysis. As IKZF1 was associated with multiple IgG Nglycan traits, we explored biomarker potential of affected N-glycans in 101 cases with SLE and 183 matched controls and demonstrated substantial discriminative power in a ROC-curve analysis (area under the curve=0.842). Our study shows that it is possible to identify new loci that control glycosylation of a single plasma protein using GWAS. The results may also provide an explanation for the reported pleiotropy and antagonistic effects of loci involved in autoimmune diseases and haematological cancer.
DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1003225
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Comments
Lauc, G., Huffman, J.E., Pucic, M., Zgaga, L., Adamczyk, B., Muzinic, A., Novokmet, M., Polasek, O., Gornik, O., Kristic, J., Keser, T., Vitart, V., Scheijen, B., Uh, H., Molokhia, M., Patrick, A.L., McKeigue, P., Kolcic, I., Lukic, I.K., Swann, O., van Leeuwen, F.N., Ruhaak, L.R., Houwing-Duistermaat, J.J., Slagboom, P.E., Beekman, M., de Craen, A.J.M., Deelder, A.M., Zeng, Q., Wang, W., Hastie, N.D., Gyllensten, U., Wilson, J.F., Wuhrer, M., Wright, A.F., Rudd, P.M., Hayward, C., Aulchenko, Y., Campbell, H., & Rudan, I. (2013). Loci associated with N-glycolysation of human immunoglobulin G show pleiotropy with autoimmune diseases and haematological cancers. PLoS Genetics, 9(1), e1003225 . Available here