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Candidate gene analysis and exome sequencing confirm LBX1 as a susceptibility gene for idiopathic scoliosis.

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posted on 2024-10-21, 14:57 authored by Anna Grauers, Jingwen Wang, Elisabet Einarsdottir, Ane Simony, Aina Danielsson, Kristina Åkesson, Acke Ohlin, Klas Halldin, Pawel Grabowski, Max Tenne, Hannele Laivuori, Ingrid DahlmanIngrid Dahlman, Mikkel Andersen, Steen Bach Christensen, Magnus K Karlsson, Hong JiaoHong Jiao, Juha KereJuha Kere, Paul GerdhemPaul Gerdhem

BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Idiopathic scoliosis is a spinal deformity affecting approximately 3% of otherwise healthy children or adolescents. The etiology is still largely unknown but has an important genetic component. Genome-wide association studies have identified a number of common genetic variants that are significantly associated with idiopathic scoliosis in Asian and Caucasian populations, rs11190870 close to the LBX1 gene being the most replicated finding. 

PURPOSE: The aim of the present study was to investigate the genetics of idiopathic scoliosis in a Scandinavian cohort by performing a candidate gene study of four variants previously shown to be associated with idiopathic scoliosis and exome sequencing of idiopathic scoliosis patients with a severe phenotype to identify possible novel scoliosis risk variants. 

STUDY DESIGN: This was a case control study. 

PATIENT SAMPLE: A total of 1,739 patients with idiopathic scoliosis and 1,812 controls were included. 

OUTCOME MEASURE: The outcome measure was idiopathic scoliosis. 

METHODS: The variants rs10510181, rs11190870, rs12946942, and rs6570507 were genotyped in 1,739 patients with idiopathic scoliosis and 1,812 controls. Exome sequencing was performed on pooled samples from 100 surgically treated idiopathic scoliosis patients. Novel or rare missense, nonsense, or splice site variants were selected for individual genotyping in the 1,739 cases and 1,812 controls. In addition, the 5'UTR, noncoding exon and promoter regions of LBX1, not covered by exome sequencing, were Sanger sequenced in the 100 pooled samples. 

RESULTS: Of the four candidate genes, an intergenic variant, rs11190870, downstream of the LBX1 gene, showed a highly significant association to idiopathic scoliosis in 1,739 cases and 1,812 controls (p=7.0×10(-18)). We identified 20 novel variants by exome sequencing after filtration and an initial genotyping validation. However, we could not verify any association to idiopathic scoliosis in the large cohort of 1,739 cases and 1,812 controls. We did not find any variants in the 5'UTR, noncoding exon and promoter regions of LBX1. 

CONCLUSIONS: Here, we confirm LBX1 as a susceptibility gene for idiopathic scoliosis in a Scandinavian population and report that we are unable to find evidence of other genes of similar or stronger effect.

History

File version

  • Accepted manuscript

Publication status

Published

Sub type

Article

Journal

Spine J

ISSN

1529-9430

eISSN

1878-1632

Volume

15

Issue

10

Pagination

2239-2246

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2015-08-05

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