The genetic background of inflammatory bowel disease: from correlation to causality

Publication date

2017-01

Authors

Uniken Venema, Werna Tc
Voskuil, MichielISNI 0000000392050007
Dijkstra, Gerard
Weersma, Rinse K
Festen, Eleonora Am

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Abstract

Recent studies have greatly improved our insight into the genetic background of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). New high-throughput technologies and large-scale international collaborations have contributed to the identification of 200 independent genetic risk loci for IBD. However, in most of these loci, it is unclear which gene conveys the risk for IBD. More importantly, it is unclear which variant within or near the gene is causal to the disease. Using targeted GWAS, imputation, resequencing of risk loci, and in silico fine-mapping of densely typed loci, several causal variants have been identified in IBD risk genes, and various pathological pathways have been uncovered. Current research in the field of IBD focuses on the effect of these causal variants on gene expression and protein function. However, more elements than only the genome must be taken into account to disentangle the multifactorial pathology of IBD. The genetic risk loci identified to date only explain a small part of genetic variance in disease risk. Currently, large multi-omics studies are incorporating factors ranging from the gut microbiome to the environment. In this review, we present the progress that has been made in IBD genetic research and stress the importance of studying causality to increase our understanding of the pathogenesis of IBD. We highlight important causal genetic variants in the candidate genes NOD2, ATG16L1, IRGM, IL23R, CARD9, RNF186, and PRDM1. We describe their downstream effects on protein function and their direct effects on the gut immune system. Furthermore, we discuss the future role of genetics in unravelling disease mechanisms in IBD.

Keywords

Crohn's disease; ulcerative colitis; inflammatory bowel disease; genetics; pathways; causal variants; causality; environmental factors; microbiome, Review, Journal Article

Citation

Uniken Venema, W T, Voskuil, M D, Dijkstra, G, Weersma, R K & Festen, E A 2017, 'The genetic background of inflammatory bowel disease : from correlation to causality', Journal of Pathology, vol. 241, no. 2, pp. 146-158. https://doi.org/10.1002/path.4817