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<art><ui>ar3939</ui><ji>1478-6354</ji><fm>
<dochead>Meeting abstract</dochead>
<bibl>
<title>
<p>MicroRNA-3148 modulates differential gene expression of the SLE-associated <it>TLR7 </it>variant</p>
</title>
<aug>
<au id="A1"><snm>Deng</snm><fnm>Y</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A2"><snm>Zhao</snm><fnm>J</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A3"><snm>Sakurai</snm><fnm>D</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A4"><snm>Kaufman</snm><fnm>KM</fnm><insr iid="I2"/><insr iid="I3"/></au>
<au id="A5"><snm>Edberg</snm><fnm>JC</fnm><insr iid="I4"/></au>
<au id="A6"><snm>Kimberly</snm><fnm>RP</fnm><insr iid="I4"/></au>
<au id="A7"><snm>Kamen</snm><fnm>DL</fnm><insr iid="I5"/></au>
<au id="A8"><snm>Gilkeson</snm><fnm>GS</fnm><insr iid="I5"/></au>
<au id="A9"><snm>Jacob</snm><fnm>CO</fnm><insr iid="I6"/></au>
<au id="A10"><snm>Scofield</snm><fnm>RH</fnm><insr iid="I7"/><insr iid="I8"/><insr iid="I9"/></au>
<au id="A11"><snm>Langefeld</snm><fnm>CD</fnm><insr iid="I10"/></au>
<au id="A12"><snm>Kelly</snm><fnm>JA</fnm><insr iid="I7"/></au>
<au id="A13"><snm>Alarc&#243;n-Riquelme</snm><fnm>ME</fnm></au>
<au id="A14" type="on_behalf"><cnm>BIOLUPUS and GENLES Networks</cnm><insr iid="I7"/><insr iid="I11"/></au>
<au id="A15"><snm>Harley</snm><fnm>JB</fnm><insr iid="I2"/><insr iid="I3"/></au>
<au id="A16"><snm>Vyse</snm><fnm>TJ</fnm><insr iid="I12"/></au>
<au id="A17"><snm>Freedman</snm><fnm>BI</fnm><insr iid="I13"/></au>
<au id="A18"><snm>Gaffney</snm><fnm>PM</fnm><insr iid="I7"/></au>
<au id="A19"><snm>Sivils</snm><fnm>KM</fnm><insr iid="I7"/></au>
<au id="A20"><snm>James</snm><fnm>JA</fnm><insr iid="I7"/><insr iid="I8"/></au>
<au id="A21"><snm>Niewold</snm><fnm>TB</fnm><insr iid="I14"/></au>
<au id="A22"><snm>Cantor</snm><fnm>RM</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A23"><snm>Chen</snm><fnm>W</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A24"><snm>Hahn</snm><fnm>BH</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
<au id="A25"><snm>Brown</snm><fnm>EE</fnm></au>
<au id="A26" type="on_behalf"><cnm>PROFILE</cnm><insr iid="I4"/></au>
<au ca="yes" id="A27"><snm>Tsao</snm><fnm>BP</fnm><insr iid="I1"/></au>
</aug>
<insg>
<ins id="I1"><p>University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I2"><p>Center for Autoimmune Genomics &amp; Etiology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I3"><p>US Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I4"><p>University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I5"><p>Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I6"><p>Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I7"><p>Arthritis &amp; Clinical Immunology Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma City, OK, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I8"><p>University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I9"><p>US Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I10"><p>Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Wake Forest, NC, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I11"><p>Centro de Gen&#243;mica e Investigaci&#243;n Oncol&#243;gica (GENYO), Pfizer-Universidad de Granada-Junta de Andalucia, Granada, Spain</p></ins>
<ins id="I12"><p>King's College London, UK</p></ins>
<ins id="I13"><p>Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA</p></ins>
<ins id="I14"><p>Gwen Knapp Center for Lupus and Immunology Research, University of Chicago, IL, USA</p></ins>
</insg>
<source>Arthritis Research &amp; Therapy</source>


<supplement><title><p>Lupus 2012: New targets, new approaches</p></title><editor>Peter E Lipsky, John M Esdaile, Matthew H Liang and Paul R Fortin</editor><note>Meeting abstracts</note></supplement><conference><title><p>Lupus 2012: New targets, new approaches</p></title><location>Whistler, Canada</location><date-range>27-30 September 2012</date-range></conference><issn>1478-6354</issn>
<pubdate>2012</pubdate>
<volume>14</volume>
<issue>Suppl 3</issue>
<fpage>A5</fpage>
<url>http://arthritis-research.com/content/14/S3/A5</url>
<xrefbib><pubid idtype="doi">10.1186/ar3939</pubid></xrefbib>
</bibl>
<history><pub><date><day>27</day><month>9</month><year>2012</year></date></pub></history>
<cpyrt><year>2012</year><collab>Deng et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.</collab><note>This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (<url>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0</url>), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.</note></cpyrt>
</fm><bdy>
<sec>
<st>
<p>Background</p>
</st>
<p>We identified the G allele of <it>TLR7 </it>3'-UTR SNP (rs3853839) associated with increased <it>TLR7 </it>transcripts, a more pronounced IFN signature and risk for SLE in 9,274 Eastern Asians (<it>P</it>
<sub>combined </sub>= 6.5 &#215; 10<sup>-10</sup>) <abbrgrp>
<abbr bid="B1">1</abbr>
</abbrgrp>. The current study sought replication of SLE-associated SNP(s) in non-Asian ancestries and explored molecular mechanisms underlying an identified gene variant that affects TLR7 expression.</p>
</sec>
<sec>
<st>
<p>Methods</p>
</st>
<p>We conducted genotyping, imputation and association for 98 to 116 SNPs (varying among different ancestries) covering 80 kb of <it>TLR7-TLR8 </it>in European Americans (EA), African Americans (AA) and Hispanics enriched for the Amerindian-European admixture (HS). Haplotype-based conditional testing was conducted to distinguish independent association signals. Mantel-Haenszel testing was used in transancestral meta-analysis. Association of genotypes with TLR7 expression was examined using RT-PCR, flow cytometry and reporter assays. Pyrosequencing was used to measure allelic variations in <it>TLR7 </it>transcript levels.</p>
</sec>
<sec>
<st>
<p>Results</p>
</st>
<p>The rs3853839 was confirmed as the only variant within <it>TLR7-TLR8 </it>exhibiting consistent and independent association with SLE in our transancestral fine-mapping (<it>P</it>
<sub>meta </sub>= 7.5 &#215; 10<sup>-11</sup>, OR (95% CI) = 1.24 (1.18 to 1.34)) in 13,339 subjects of EA (3,936 cases vs. 3,491 controls), AA (1,679 vs. 1,934) and HS (1,492 vs. 807) ancestries. PBMCs from normal G-allele carriers exhibited elevated levels of <it>TLR7 </it>mRNA (<it>P </it>= 0.01 in men and <it>P </it>= 0.02 in women) and protein (<it>P </it>= 0.009 in men and <it>P </it>= 0.038 in women). PBMCs from heterozygotes exhibited higher G/C allele ratios of <it>TLR7 </it>transcripts 4 hours after incubation with actinomycin D (inhibitor of transcription initiation) (<it>P </it>= 0.04), indicating slower degradation of G allele-containing transcript. The nonrisk allele, but not the risk allele, was predicted to match microRNA-3148 (miR-3148) at the second base in the binding site. Transcript levels of miR-3148 and TLR7 were inversely correlated in PBMCs from 16 SLE patients and 21 controls (<it>R</it>
<sup>2 </sup>= 0.255, <it>P </it>= 0.001), suggesting miR-3148 modulating TLR7 expression. Overexpression of miR-3148 via transfection into HEK 293 cells led to a more than twofold reduction in luciferase activity driven by the <it>TLR7 </it>3'-UTR segment containing the nonrisk allele than that containing the risk allele (<it>P </it>= 0.001).</p>
</sec>
<sec>
<st>
<p>Conclusion</p>
</st>
<p>We identified and confirmed a genome-wide significant association between rs3853839 and SLE susceptibility in 22,613 subjects of Eastern Asian, EA, AA and HS ancestries (<it>P</it>
<sub>meta </sub>= 6.4 &#215; 10<sup>-19</sup>, OR (95% CI) = 1.26 (1.20 to 1.32)). Reduced modulation by miR-3148 confers slower degradation of the risk allele containing <it>TLR7 </it>transcript, resulting in elevated levels of gene products and a more robust type I IFN signature.</p>
</sec>
</bdy><bm>
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</bm></art>