Genomewide Association Analysis of Human Narcolepsy and a New Resistance Gene

Citation
Kawashima, Minae et al., Genomewide Association Analysis of Human Narcolepsy and a New Resistance Gene, American journal of human genetics , 79(2), 2006, pp. 252-263
ISSN journal
00029297
Volume
79
Issue
2
Year of publication
2006
Pages
252 - 263
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Human narcolepsy is a hypersomnia that is affected by multiple genetic and environmental factors. One genetic factor strongly associated with narcolepsy is the HLA-DRB1*1501-DQB1*0602 haplotype in the human leukocyte antigen region on chromosome 6, whereas the other genetic factors are not clear. To discover additional candidate regions for susceptibility or resistance to human narcolepsy, we performed a genomewide association study, using 23,244 microsatellite markers. Two rounds of screening with the use of pooled DNAs yielded 96 microsatellite markers (including 16 markers on chromosome 6) with significantly different estimated frequencies in case and control pools. Markers not located on chromosome 6 were evaluated by the individual typing of 95 cases and 95 controls; 30 markers still showed significant associations. A strong association was displayed by a marker on chromosome 21 (21q22.3). The surrounding region was subjected to high-density association mapping with 14 additional microsatellite markers and 74 SNPs. One microsatellite marker (D21S0012m) and two SNPs (rs13048981 and rs13046884) showed strong associations (P<.0005; odds ratios 0.19.0.33). These polymorphisms were in a strong linkage disequilibrium, and no other polymorphism in the region showed a stronger association with narcolepsy. The region contains three predicted genes.NLC1-A, NLC1-B, and NLC1-C.tentatively named .narcolepsy candidate-region 1 genes,. and NLC1-A and NLC1-C were expressed in human hypothalamus. Reporter-gene assays showed that the marker D21S0012m in the promoter region and the SNP rs13046884 in the intron of NLC1-A significantly affected expression levels. Therefore, NLC1-A is considered to be a new resistance gene for human narcolepsy.