Functional rare and low frequency variants in BLK and BANK1 contribute to human lupus

Date

2019-05-17

Authors

Jiang, Simon
Athanasopoulos, Vicki
Ellyard, Julia
Chuah, Lay Hong
Cappello, Jean
Cook, Amelia
Prabhu, Savit
Cardenas, Jacob
Gu, Jinghua
Stanley, Maurice

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Publisher

Nature Research (part of Springer Nature)

Abstract

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the prototypic systemic autoimmune disease. It is thought that many common variant gene loci of weak effect act additively to predispose to common autoimmune diseases, while the contribution of rare variants remains unclear. Here we describe that rare coding variants in lupus-risk genes are present in most SLE patients and healthy controls. We demonstrate the functional consequences of rare and low frequency missense variants in the interacting proteins BLK and BANK1, which are present alone, or in combination, in a substantial proportion of lupus patients. The rare variants found in patients, but not those found exclusively in controls, impair suppression of IRF5 and type-I IFN in human B cell lines and increase pathogenic lymphocytes in lupus-prone mice. Thus, rare gene variants are common in SLE and likely contribute to genetic risk.

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Source

Nature Communications

Type

Journal article

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Access Statement

Open Access

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