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Dive into the research topics where Anna Latiano is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Latiano.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide meta-analysis increases to 71 the number of confirmed Crohn's disease susceptibility loci

Andre Franke; Dermot McGovern; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Kai Wang; Graham L. Radford-Smith; Tariq Ahmad; Charlie W. Lees; Tobias Balschun; James C. Lee; Rebecca L. Roberts; Carl A. Anderson; Joshua C. Bis; Suzanne Bumpstead; David Ellinghaus; Eleonora M. Festen; Michel Georges; Todd Green; Talin Haritunians; Luke Jostins; Anna Latiano; Christopher G. Mathew; Grant W. Montgomery; Natalie J. Prescott; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Jerome I. Rotter; Philip Schumm; Yashoda Sharma; Lisa A. Simms; Kent D. Taylor; David C. Whiteman

We undertook a meta-analysis of six Crohns disease genome-wide association studies (GWAS) comprising 6,333 affected individuals (cases) and 15,056 controls and followed up the top association signals in 15,694 cases, 14,026 controls and 414 parent-offspring trios. We identified 30 new susceptibility loci meeting genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8). A series of in silico analyses highlighted particular genes within these loci and, together with manual curation, implicated functionally interesting candidate genes including SMAD3, ERAP2, IL10, IL2RA, TYK2, FUT2, DNMT3A, DENND1B, BACH2 and TAGAP. Combined with previously confirmed loci, these results identify 71 distinct loci with genome-wide significant evidence for association with Crohns disease.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Deep resequencing of GWAS loci identifies independent rare variants associated with inflammatory bowel disease

Manuel A. Rivas; Mélissa Beaudoin; Agnès Gardet; Christine Stevens; Yashoda Sharma; Clarence K. Zhang; Gabrielle Boucher; Stephan Ripke; David Ellinghaus; Noël P. Burtt; Timothy Fennell; Andrew Kirby; Anna Latiano; Philippe Goyette; Todd Green; Jonas Halfvarson; Talin Haritunians; Joshua M. Korn; Finny Kuruvilla; Caroline Lagacé; Benjamin M. Neale; Ken Sin Lo; Phil Schumm; Leif Törkvist; Marla Dubinsky; Steven R. Brant; Mark S. Silverberg; Richard H. Duerr; David Altshuler; Stacey Gabriel

More than 1,000 susceptibility loci have been identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of common variants; however, the specific genes and full allelic spectrum of causal variants underlying these findings have not yet been defined. Here we used pooled next-generation sequencing to study 56 genes from regions associated with Crohns disease in 350 cases and 350 controls. Through follow-up genotyping of 70 rare and low-frequency protein-altering variants in nine independent case-control series (16,054 Crohns disease cases, 12,153 ulcerative colitis cases and 17,575 healthy controls), we identified four additional independent risk factors in NOD2, two additional protective variants in IL23R, a highly significant association with a protective splice variant in CARD9 (P < 1 × 10−16, odds ratio ≈ 0.29) and additional associations with coding variants in IL18RAP, CUL2, C1orf106, PTPN22 and MUC19. We extend the results of successful GWAS by identifying new, rare and probably functional variants that could aid functional experiments and predictive models.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association identifies multiple ulcerative colitis susceptibility loci

Dermot McGovern; Agnès Gardet; Leif Törkvist; Philippe Goyette; Jonah Essers; Kent D. Taylor; Benjamin M. Neale; Rick Twee-Hee Ong; Caroline Lagacé; Chun Li; Todd Green; Christine Stevens; Claudine Beauchamp; Phillip Fleshner; Marie Carlson; Mauro D'Amato; Jonas Halfvarson; Martin L. Hibberd; Mikael Lördal; Leonid Padyukov; Angelo Andriulli; E. Colombo; Anna Latiano; Orazio Palmieri; Edmond Jean Bernard; Colette Deslandres; Daan W. Hommes; Dirk J. de Jong; Pieter Stokkers; Rinse K. Weersma

Ulcerative colitis is a chronic, relapsing inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract with a complex genetic and environmental etiology. In an effort to identify genetic variation underlying ulcerative colitis risk, we present two distinct genome-wide association studies of ulcerative colitis and their joint analysis with a previously published scan, comprising, in aggregate, 2,693 individuals with ulcerative colitis and 6,791 control subjects. Fifty-nine SNPs from 14 independent loci attained an association significance of P < 10−5. Seven of these loci exceeded genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8). After testing an independent cohort of 2,009 cases of ulcerative colitis and 1,580 controls, we identified 13 loci that were significantly associated with ulcerative colitis (P < 5 × 10−8), including the immunoglobulin receptor gene FCGR2A, 5p15, 2p16 and ORMDL3 (orosomucoid1-like 3). We confirmed association with 14 previously identified ulcerative colitis susceptibility loci, and an analysis of acknowledged Crohns disease loci showed that roughly half of the known Crohns disease associations are shared with ulcerative colitis. These data implicate approximately 30 loci in ulcerative colitis, thereby providing insight into disease pathogenesis.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Common variants at five new loci associated with early-onset inflammatory bowel disease

Marcin Imielinski; Robert N. Baldassano; Anne M. Griffiths; Richard K. Russell; Vito Annese; Marla Dubinsky; Subra Kugathasan; Jonathan P. Bradfield; Thomas D. Walters; Patrick Sleiman; Cecilia E. Kim; Aleixo M. Muise; Kai Wang; Joseph T. Glessner; Shehzad A. Saeed; Haitao Zhang; Edward C. Frackelton; Cuiping Hou; James H. Flory; George Otieno; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Robert W. Grundmeier; M. Castro; Anna Latiano; Bruno Dallapiccola; Joanne M. Stempak; Debra J. Abrams; Kent D. Taylor; Dermot McGovern; Melvin B. Heyman

The inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis are common causes of morbidity in children and young adults in the western world. Here we report the results of a genome-wide association study in early-onset IBD involving 3,426 affected individuals and 11,963 genetically matched controls recruited through international collaborations in Europe and North America, thereby extending the results from a previous study of 1,011 individuals with early-onset IBD. We have identified five new regions associated with early-onset IBD susceptibility, including 16p11 near the cytokine gene IL27 (rs8049439, P = 2.41 × 10−9), 22q12 (rs2412973, P = 1.55 × 10−9), 10q22 (rs1250550, P = 5.63 × 10−9), 2q37 (rs4676410, P = 3.64 × 10−8) and 19q13.11 (rs10500264, P = 4.26 × 10−10). Our scan also detected associations at 23 of 32 loci previously implicated in adult-onset Crohns disease and at 8 of 17 loci implicated in adult-onset ulcerative colitis, highlighting the close pathogenetic relationship between early- and adult-onset IBD.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Ulcerative colitis-risk loci on chromosomes 1p36 and 12q15 found by genome-wide association study

Mark S. Silverberg; Judy H. Cho; John D. Rioux; Dermot McGovern; Jing Wu; Vito Annese; Jean Paul Achkar; Philippe Goyette; Regan Scott; Wei Xu; M. Michael Barmada; Lambertus Klei; Mark J. Daly; Clara Abraham; Theodore M. Bayless; Fabrizio Bossa; Anne M. Griffiths; Andrew Ippoliti; Raymond Lahaie; Anna Latiano; Pierre Paré; Deborah D. Proctor; Miguel Regueiro; A. Hillary Steinhart; Stephan R. Targan; L. Philip Schumm; Emily O. Kistner; Annette Lee; Peter K. Gregersen; Jerome I. Rotter

Ulcerative colitis is a chronic inflammatory disease of the colon that presents as diarrhea and gastrointestinal bleeding. We performed a genome-wide association study using DNA samples from 1,052 individuals with ulcerative colitis and preexisting data from 2,571 controls, all of European ancestry. In an analysis that controlled for gender and population structure, ulcerative colitis loci attaining genome-wide significance and subsequent replication in two independent populations were identified on chromosomes 1p36 (rs6426833, combined P = 5.1 × 10−13, combined odds ratio OR = 0.73) and 12q15 (rs1558744, combined P = 2.5 × 10−12, combined OR = 1.35). In addition, combined genome-wide significant evidence for association was found in a region spanning BTNL2 to HLA-DQB1 on chromosome 6p21 (rs2395185, combined P = 1.0 × 10−16, combined OR = 0.66) and at the IL23R locus on chromosome 1p31 (rs11209026, combined P = 1.3 × 10−8, combined OR = 0.56; rs10889677, combined P = 1.3 × 10−8, combined OR = 1.29).


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1997

Helicobacter pylori infection and growth delay in older children.

Francesco Perri; M. Pastore; Gioacchino Leandro; Rocco Clemente; Yvo Ghoos; Marc Peeters; Vito Annese; Michele Quitadamo; Anna Latiano; Paul Rutgeerts; Angelo Andriulli

It is thought that Helicobacter pyloriinfection may influence growth rate in children. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of H pylori infection in healthy Italian children, and to look for differences in height between infected and non-infected subjects. Two hundred and sixteen children, aged 3 to 14 years, were tested for H pylori infection by13C-urea breath test. Centile values for height were calculated. Composite indices for socioeconomic class and household crowding were also determined. Forty nine of 216 children (22.7%) wereH pylori positive. The prevalence of infection increased with age. Eight of 49 H pylori positive children (16.3%) were below the 25th centile for height, compared with 13 of 167 H pylori negative children (7.8%). This difference became significant in children aged 8.5 to 14 years; in this group (n = 127), eight of 31 infected children (25.8%) were below the 25th centile for height, compared with eight of 96 non-infected children (8.3%). A significant correlation was found between socioeconomic conditions, household crowding, and H pylori status. By using stepwise logistic regression, only the centile value for height was significantly related to H pylori status in older children. Thus H pylori infection was associated with growth delay in older children, poor socioeconomic conditions, and household overcrowding. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that H pylori infection is one of the environmental factors capable of affecting growth.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2005

Variants of CARD15 are associated with an aggressive clinical course of Crohn's disease--an IG-IBD study.

Vito Annese; Giovanni Lombardi; Francesco Perri; R. D'Incà; Gabriele Riegler; Stelio Giaccari; Maurizio Vecchi; Fabiana Castiglione; Paolo Gionchetti; Elena Cocchiara; Sergio Vigneri; Anna Latiano; Orazio Palmieri; Angelo Andriulli

BACKGROUND:Three major variants of the CARD15 gene confer susceptibility to Crohns disease (CD). Whether or not these variants correlate with specific clinical features of the disease is under evaluation.AIM:We investigated the possible association of CARD15 variants with specific clinical characteristics, including the occurrence of anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies (ASCA) and antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), in a large cohort of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients and their unaffected relatives.METHODS:Three hundred and sixteen CD patients (156 with positive family history), 408 ulcerative colitis (UC) patients (206 with positive family history), 588 unaffected relatives, and 205 unrelated healthy controls (HC) were studied. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) R702W, G908R, and L1007finsC of the CARD15 gene were investigated and correlated to age at diagnosis, gender, family history, localization, extraintestinal manifestations, previous resective surgery, stenosing/fistulizing pattern, ANCA, and ASCA.RESULTS:Compared to HC, the frequencies of all three variants in CD were significantly increased: 8.7%versus 4.1% for R702W (p < 0.006), 7.3%versus 2.7% for G908R (p < 0.002), 9.3%versus 0.7% for L1007finsC (p < 0.00001). At least one risk allele was found in 38.2% (p < 0.0001, compared to HC), 13.7% (NS), and 15.1% of CD, UC, and HC, respectively. The L1007finsC risk allele was also significantly increased in unaffected relatives of familial (9.5%; p < 0.00001), and sporadic CD (9%; p < 0.00001), compared to HC (0.7%). Sixteen healthy relatives, carriers of two risk alleles, were asymptomatic after 5–8 yr of follow-up. CD carriers of at least one variant were younger (p= 0.03), more likely to have ileal localization (p= 0.0001), stenosing pattern (p= 0.01), previous resective surgery (p= 0.0001), and presence of ASCA (p= 0.0001). No difference in SNPs frequency between familial and sporadic cases of CD was found.CONCLUSIONS:In our population, both familial and sporadic CD patients carrying at least one major variant of CARD15 had an aggressive clinical course.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Association of DLG5 R30Q variant with inflammatory bowel disease

Mark J. Daly; Alexandra V. Pearce; Lisa Farwell; Sheila Fisher; Anna Latiano; Natalie J. Prescott; Alastair Forbes; John C. Mansfield; Jeremy Sanderson; Diane Langelier; Albert Cohen; Alain Bitton; Gary Wild; Cathryn M. Lewis; Vito Annese; Christopher G. Mathew; John D. Rioux

Crohns disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are chronic inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal system known as the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Recently, Stoll and colleagues reported a novel finding of genetic variation in the DLG5 gene that is associated with IBD (CD and UC combined). We present here a study of the genetic variation described in that report in two well-powered, independent case–control cohorts and one family-based collection, and confirm the proposed association between IBD and the R30Q variant of DLG5 in two of the three studies. We are, however, unable to replicate the other proposed association to the common haplotype described in Stoll et al and suggest that this other finding could conceivably have been partially a statistical fluctuation and partially a result of LD with the replicated R30Q association. This study provides support for the hypothesis that DLG5 constitutes a true IBD risk factor of modest effect.


Gastroenterology | 2013

Association Between Variants of PRDM1 and NDP52 and Crohn's Disease, Based on Exome Sequencing and Functional Studies

David Ellinghaus; Hu Zhang; Sebastian Zeissig; Simone Lipinski; Andreas Till; Tao Jiang; Björn Stade; Yana Bromberg; Eva Ellinghaus; Andreas Keller; Manuel A. Rivas; Jurgita Skieceviciene; Nadezhda Tsankova Doncheva; Xiao Liu; Qing Liu; Fuman Jiang; Michael Forster; Gabriele Mayr; Mario Albrecht; Robert Häsler; Bernhard O. Boehm; Jane Goodall; Carlo R Berzuini; James C. Lee; Vibeke Andersen; Ulla Vogel; Manfred Kayser; Michael Krawczak; Susanna Nikolaus; Rinse K. Weersma

BACKGROUND & AIMS Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified 140 Crohns disease (CD) susceptibility loci. For most loci, the variants that cause disease are not known and the genes affected by these variants have not been identified. We aimed to identify variants that cause CD through detailed sequencing, genetic association, expression, and functional studies. METHODS We sequenced whole exomes of 42 unrelated subjects with CD and 5 healthy subjects (controls) and then filtered single nucleotide variants by incorporating association results from meta-analyses of CD GWAS and in silico mutation effect prediction algorithms. We then genotyped 9348 subjects with CD, 2868 subjects with ulcerative colitis, and 14,567 control subjects and associated variants analyzed in functional studies using materials from subjects and controls and in vitro model systems. RESULTS We identified rare missense mutations in PR domain-containing 1 (PRDM1) and associated these with CD. These mutations increased proliferation of T cells and secretion of cytokines on activation and increased expression of the adhesion molecule L-selectin. A common CD risk allele, identified in GWAS, correlated with reduced expression of PRDM1 in ileal biopsy specimens and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (combined P = 1.6 × 10(-8)). We identified an association between CD and a common missense variant, Val248Ala, in nuclear domain 10 protein 52 (NDP52) (P = 4.83 × 10(-9)). We found that this variant impairs the regulatory functions of NDP52 to inhibit nuclear factor κB activation of genes that regulate inflammation and affect the stability of proteins in Toll-like receptor pathways. CONCLUSIONS We have extended the results of GWAS and provide evidence that variants in PRDM1 and NDP52 determine susceptibility to CD. PRDM1 maps adjacent to a CD interval identified in GWAS and encodes a transcription factor expressed by T and B cells. NDP52 is an adaptor protein that functions in selective autophagy of intracellular bacteria and signaling molecules, supporting the role of autophagy in the pathogenesis of CD.


Mucosal Immunology | 2008

Gene-centric Association Mapping of Chromosome 3p implicates MST1 in IBD pathogenesis

Philippe Goyette; C Lefebvre; Aylwin Ng; S R Brant; Judy H. Cho; R. H. Duerr; Mark S. Silverberg; Kent D. Taylor; Anna Latiano; Guy Aumais; Colette Deslandres; Gilles Jobin; Vito Annese; Mark J. Daly; Ramnik J. Xavier; John D. Rioux

Association mapping and candidate gene studies within inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) linkage regions, as well as genome-wide association studies in Crohns disease (CD) have led to the discovery of multiple risk genes, but these explain only a fraction of the genetic susceptibility observed in IBD. We have thus been pursuing a region on chromosome 3p21–22 showing linkage to CD and ulcerative colitis (UC) using a gene-centric association mapping approach. We identified 12 functional candidate genes by searching for literature cocitations with relevant keywords and for gene expression patterns consistent with immune/intestinal function. We then performed an association study composed of a screening phase, where tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were evaluated in 1,020 IBD patients, and an independent replication phase in 745 IBD patients. These analyses identified and replicated significant association with IBD for four SNPs within a 1.2 Mb linkage disequilibrium region. We then identified a non-synonymous coding variant (rs3197999, R689C) in the macrophage-stimulating 1 (MST1) gene (P-value 3.62 × 10–6) that accounts for the association signal, and shows association with both CD and UC. MST1 encodes macrophage-stimulating protein (MSP), a protein regulating the innate immune responses to bacterial ligands. R689C is predicted to interfere with MSP binding to its receptor, suggesting a role for this gene in the pathogenesis of IBD.

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Dive into the Anna Latiano's collaboration.

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Vito Annese

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Orazio Palmieri

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Angelo Andriulli

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Fabrizio Bossa

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Maria Rosa Valvano

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Tiziana Latiano

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Giuseppe Corritore

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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M. Castro

Boston Children's Hospital

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