Abstract

Background: Hepatitis B is known to cause several forms of liver diseases including chronic hepatitis B (CHB), and hepatocellular carcinoma. Previous genome-wide association study of CHB risk has demonstrated that rs12614 of complement factor B (CFB) was significantly associated with CHB risk. In this study, fine-mapping study of previously reported GWAS single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; CFB rs12614) was performed to validate genetic effect of rs12614 on CHB susceptibility and identify possible additional causal variants around rs12614 in a Korean population. This association study was conducted in order to identify genetic effects of CFB single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and to identify additional independent CHB susceptible causal markers within a Korean population.

Methods: A total of 10 CFB genetic polymorphisms were selected and genotyped in 1,716 study subjects comprised of 955 CHB patients and 761 population controls.

Results: A non-synonymous variant, rs12614 (Arg32Trp) in exon2 of CFB, had significant associations with risk of CHB (odds ratio = 0.43, P = 5.91×10-10). Additional linkage disequilibrium and conditional analysis confirmed that rs12614 had independent genetic effect on CHB susceptibility with previously identified CHB markers. The genetic risk scores (GRSs) were calculated and the CHB patients had higher GRSs than the population controls. Moreover, OR was found to increase significantly with cumulative GRS.

Conclusions: rs12614 showed significant genetic effect on CHB risk within the Korean population. As such rs12614 may be used as a possible causal genetic variant for CHB susceptibility.

Details

Title
A Non-Synonymous Variant rs12614 of Complement Factor B Associated with Risk of Chronic Hepatitis B in a Korean Population
Author
Seo, Jung Yeon; Shin, Joong Gon; Youn, Byeong Ju; Namgoong, Suhg; Cheong, Hyun Sub; Kim, Lyoung Hyo; Kim, Ji On; Shin, Hyoung Doo; Yoon Jun Kim
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Dec 9, 2020
Publisher
Research Square
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2538419002
Copyright
© 2020. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.