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Meta-analysis identifies seven susceptibility loci involved in the atopic march

Eczema often precedes the development of asthma in a disease course called the 'atopic march'.

Authors:
Marenholz I, Esparza-Gordillo J, Rüschendorf F, Bauerfeind A, Strachan DP, Spycher BD, ... Holt PG, et al.

Authors notes:
Nat Commun. 2015;6:8804.

Keywords:
atopic march, asthma, allergic, sequential progression, chromosome 12q, chromosome 6p, eczema, single nucleotide polymorphism, genetic association, genetic susceptibility

Abstract

Eczema often precedes the development of asthma in a disease course called the 'atopic march'.

To unravel the genes underlying this characteristic pattern of allergic disease, we conduct a multi-stage genome-wide association study on infantile eczema followed by childhood asthma in 12 populations including 2,428 cases and 17,034 controls.

Here we report two novel loci specific for the combined eczema plus asthma phenotype, which are associated with allergic disease for the first time; rs9357733 located in EFHC1 on chromosome 6p12.3 and rs993226 between TMTC2 and SLC6A15 on chromosome 12q21.3.

Additional susceptibility loci identified at genome-wide significance are FLG (1q21.3), IL4/KIF3A (5q31.1), AP5B1/OVOL1 (11q13.1), C11orf30/LRRC32 (11q13.5) and IKZF3 (17q21).

We show that predominantly eczema loci increase the risk for the atopic march.

Our findings suggest that eczema may play an important role in the development of asthma after eczema.