High-Density Genome Scan in Crohn Disease Shows Confirmed Linkage to Chromosome 14q11-12

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Epidemiological studies have shown that genetic factors contribute to the pathogenesis of the idiopathic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Recent genome scans and replication studies have identified replicated linkage between CD and a locus on chromosome 16 (the IBD1 locus), replicated linkage between IBD (especially UC) and a locus on chromosome 12q (the IBD2 locus), and replicated linkage between IBD (especially CD) and a locus on chromosome 6p (the IBD3 locus). Since the estimated locus-specific λs values for the regions of replicated linkage do not account for the overall λs in CD, and since the published genome scans in IBD show at least nominal evidence for linkage to regions on all but two chromosomes, we performed an independent genome scan using 751 microsatellite loci in 127 CD-affected relative pairs from 62 families. Single-point nonparametric linkage analysis using the GENEHUNTER-PLUS program shows evidence for linkage to the adjacent D14S261 and D14S283 loci on chromosome 14q11-12 (LOD = 3.00 and 1.70, respectively), and the maximal multipoint LOD score is observed at D14S261 (LOD = 3.60). In the multipoint analysis, nominal evidence for linkage (P<.05) is observed near D2S117 (LOD = 1.25), near D3S3045 (LOD = 1.31), between D7S40 and D7S648 (LOD = 0.91), and near D18S61 (LOD = 1.15). Our finding of significant linkage to D14S261 and the finding of suggestive linkage to the same locus in an independent study (multipoint LOD = 2.8) satisfies criteria for confirmed linkage, so we propose that the region of interest on chromosome 14q11-12 should be designated the IBD4 locus.

Genetic linkage
Inflammatory bowel disease
Crohn disease

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