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Browsing by Author "Yuan, Qiaoping"

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    Exome-wide association analysis identifies novel risk loci for alcohol-associated hepatitis
    (Wolters Kluwer, 2025) Yuan, Qiaoping; Hodgkinson, Colin; Liu, Xiaochen; Barton, Bruce; Diazgranados, Nancy; Schwandt, Melanie; Morgan, Timothy; Bataller, Ramon; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Nagy, Laura E.; Goldman, David; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Background and aims: Alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) is a clinically severe, acute disease that afflicts only a fraction of patients with alcohol use disorder. Genomic studies of alcohol-associated cirrhosis (AC) have identified several genes of large effect, but the genetic and environmental factors that lead to AH and AC, and their degree of genetic overlap, remain largely unknown. This study aims to identify genes and genetic variations that contribute to the development of AH. Approach and results: Exome-sequencing of patients with AH (N=784) and heavy drinking controls (N=951) identified an exome-wide significant association for AH at patalin-like phospholipase domain containing 3, as previously observed for AC in genome-wide association study, although with a much lower effect size. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of large effect size at inducible T cell costimulatory ligand ( ICOSLG ) (Chr 21) and TOX4/RAB2B (Chr 14) were also exome-wide significant. ICOSLG encodes a co-stimulatory signal for T-cell proliferation and cytokine secretion and induces B-cell proliferation and differentiation. TOX high mobility group box family member 4 ( TOX4 ) was previously implicated in diabetes and immune system function. Other genes previously implicated in AC did not strongly contribute to AH, and the only prominently implicated (but not exome-wide significant) gene overlapping with alcohol use disorder was alcohol dehydrogenase 1B ( ADH1B ). Polygenic signals for AH were observed in both common and rare variant analysis and identified genes with roles associated with inflammation. Conclusions: This study has identified 2 new genes of high effect size with a previously unknown contribution to alcohol-associated liver disease and highlights both the overlap in etiology between liver diseases and the unique origins of AH.
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