Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling

Abstract Objective To perform a large‐scale association analysis of single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in patients with radiographically defined osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Methods We examined >25,000 SNPs located within ∼14,000 genes for associations with radiographically defined knee O...

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Published in:Arthritis & Rheumatism
Main Authors: Spector, Tim D., Reneland, Richard H., Mah, Steven, Valdes, Ana M., Hart, Deborah J., Kammerer, Stefan, Langdown, Maria, Hoyal, Carolyn R., Atienza, Josephine, Doherty, Michael, Rahman, Proton, Nelson, Matthew R., Braun, Andreas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2006
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/art.21624
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spelling crwiley:10.1002/art.21624 2024-09-15T18:20:19+00:00 Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling Spector, Tim D. Reneland, Richard H. Mah, Steven Valdes, Ana M. Hart, Deborah J. Kammerer, Stefan Langdown, Maria Hoyal, Carolyn R. Atienza, Josephine Doherty, Michael Rahman, Proton Nelson, Matthew R. Braun, Andreas 2006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/art.21624 https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fart.21624 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/art.21624 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Arthritis & Rheumatism volume 54, issue 2, page 524-532 ISSN 0004-3591 1529-0131 journal-article 2006 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1002/art.21624 2024-07-11T04:35:49Z Abstract Objective To perform a large‐scale association analysis of single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in patients with radiographically defined osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Methods We examined >25,000 SNPs located within ∼14,000 genes for associations with radiographically defined knee OA, using polymerase chain reaction and MassExtend amplification techniques. Allele frequencies were estimated initially in DNA pools from 335 female patients with knee OA and 335 asymptomatic and radiographically negative female control subjects. All were of northern European ancestry. Significant allele frequency differences were validated by genotyping of individual DNA samples. Confirmed significant findings were verified in 2 additional case–control samples from the UK (443 cases and 303 controls) and Newfoundland (346 cases and 264 controls). Chondrosarcoma cell lines were used to test for potential differences in gene expression. Results The marker most strongly associated with the risk of knee OA was rs912428, a C/T polymorphism in intron 1 of LRCH1 , a gene on chromosome 13q14 that encodes a novel protein of as‐yet‐unknown function. The frequency of the T allele compared with controls was consistently increased by 40% across all 3 case–control groups. Additional subanalyses in case–control samples with hip OA and hand OA suggested similar trends, but did not reach statistical significance. Association fine‐mapping using 10 additional SNPs in LRCH1 confirmed intron 1 as the region of highest association but failed to reveal variations with significance stronger than the marker SNP, as did the haplotype analysis. LRCH1 was not up‐regulated or overexpressed in chondrosarcoma cell lines exposed to inflammatory stimuli, suggesting a possible structural role. Conclusion A genetic variant in LRCH1 was consistently associated with knee OA in 3 samples from 2 populations. Our results also suggest that the same association with OA may exist at other sites. Additional genetic and experimental work is needed to elucidate ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland Wiley Online Library Arthritis & Rheumatism 54 2 524 532
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
description Abstract Objective To perform a large‐scale association analysis of single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in patients with radiographically defined osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Methods We examined >25,000 SNPs located within ∼14,000 genes for associations with radiographically defined knee OA, using polymerase chain reaction and MassExtend amplification techniques. Allele frequencies were estimated initially in DNA pools from 335 female patients with knee OA and 335 asymptomatic and radiographically negative female control subjects. All were of northern European ancestry. Significant allele frequency differences were validated by genotyping of individual DNA samples. Confirmed significant findings were verified in 2 additional case–control samples from the UK (443 cases and 303 controls) and Newfoundland (346 cases and 264 controls). Chondrosarcoma cell lines were used to test for potential differences in gene expression. Results The marker most strongly associated with the risk of knee OA was rs912428, a C/T polymorphism in intron 1 of LRCH1 , a gene on chromosome 13q14 that encodes a novel protein of as‐yet‐unknown function. The frequency of the T allele compared with controls was consistently increased by 40% across all 3 case–control groups. Additional subanalyses in case–control samples with hip OA and hand OA suggested similar trends, but did not reach statistical significance. Association fine‐mapping using 10 additional SNPs in LRCH1 confirmed intron 1 as the region of highest association but failed to reveal variations with significance stronger than the marker SNP, as did the haplotype analysis. LRCH1 was not up‐regulated or overexpressed in chondrosarcoma cell lines exposed to inflammatory stimuli, suggesting a possible structural role. Conclusion A genetic variant in LRCH1 was consistently associated with knee OA in 3 samples from 2 populations. Our results also suggest that the same association with OA may exist at other sites. Additional genetic and experimental work is needed to elucidate ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Spector, Tim D.
Reneland, Richard H.
Mah, Steven
Valdes, Ana M.
Hart, Deborah J.
Kammerer, Stefan
Langdown, Maria
Hoyal, Carolyn R.
Atienza, Josephine
Doherty, Michael
Rahman, Proton
Nelson, Matthew R.
Braun, Andreas
spellingShingle Spector, Tim D.
Reneland, Richard H.
Mah, Steven
Valdes, Ana M.
Hart, Deborah J.
Kammerer, Stefan
Langdown, Maria
Hoyal, Carolyn R.
Atienza, Josephine
Doherty, Michael
Rahman, Proton
Nelson, Matthew R.
Braun, Andreas
Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
author_facet Spector, Tim D.
Reneland, Richard H.
Mah, Steven
Valdes, Ana M.
Hart, Deborah J.
Kammerer, Stefan
Langdown, Maria
Hoyal, Carolyn R.
Atienza, Josephine
Doherty, Michael
Rahman, Proton
Nelson, Matthew R.
Braun, Andreas
author_sort Spector, Tim D.
title Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
title_short Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
title_full Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
title_fullStr Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
title_full_unstemmed Association between a variation in LRCH1 and knee osteoarthritis: A genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using DNA pooling
title_sort association between a variation in lrch1 and knee osteoarthritis: a genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism association study using dna pooling
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2006
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/art.21624
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fart.21624
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/art.21624
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op_source Arthritis & Rheumatism
volume 54, issue 2, page 524-532
ISSN 0004-3591 1529-0131
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/art.21624
container_title Arthritis & Rheumatism
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