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Dive into the research topics where Annette Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Annette Lee.


Science | 2006

A genome-wide association study identifies IL23R as an inflammatory bowel disease gene.

Richard H. Duerr; Kent D. Taylor; Steven R. Brant; John D. Rioux; Mark S. Silverberg; Mark J. Daly; A. Hillary Steinhart; Clara Abraham; Miguel Regueiro; Anne M. Griffiths; Themistocles Dassopoulos; Alain Bitton; Huiying Yang; Stephan R. Targan; Lisa W. Datta; Emily O. Kistner; L. Philip Schumm; Annette Lee; Peter K. Gregersen; M. Michael Barmada; Jerome I. Rotter; Dan L. Nicolae; Judy H. Cho

The inflammatory bowel diseases Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis are common, chronic disorders that cause abdominal pain, diarrhea, and gastrointestinal bleeding. To identify genetic factors that might contribute to these disorders, we performed a genome-wide association study. We found a highly significant association between Crohns disease and the IL23R gene on chromosome 1p31, which encodes a subunit of the receptor for the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-23. An uncommon coding variant (rs11209026, c.1142G>A, p.Arg381Gln) confers strong protection against Crohns disease, and additional noncoding IL23R variants are independently associated. Replication studies confirmed IL23R associations in independent cohorts of patients with Crohns disease or ulcerative colitis. These results and previous studies on the proinflammatory role of IL-23 prioritize this signaling pathway as a therapeutic target in inflammatory bowel disease.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Genome-wide association scan in women with systemic lupus erythematosus identifies susceptibility variants in ITGAM , PXK , KIAA1542 and other loci

John B. Harley; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Lindsey A. Criswell; Chaim O. Jacob; Robert P. Kimberly; Kathy L. Moser; Betty P. Tsao; Timothy J. Vyse; Carl D. Langefeld; Swapan K. Nath; Joel M. Guthridge; Beth L. Cobb; Daniel B. Mirel; Miranda C. Marion; Adrienne H. Williams; Jasmin Divers; Wei Wang; Summer G Frank; Bahram Namjou; Stacey Gabriel; Annette Lee; Peter K. Gregersen; Timothy W. Behrens; Kimberly E. Taylor; Michelle M. A. Fernando; Raphael Zidovetzki; Patrick M. Gaffney; Jeffrey C. Edberg; John D. Rioux; Joshua O. Ojwang

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a common systemic autoimmune disease with complex etiology but strong clustering in families (λS = ∼30). We performed a genome-wide association scan using 317,501 SNPs in 720 women of European ancestry with SLE and in 2,337 controls, and we genotyped consistently associated SNPs in two additional independent sample sets totaling 1,846 affected women and 1,825 controls. Aside from the expected strong association between SLE and the HLA region on chromosome 6p21 and the previously confirmed non-HLA locus IRF5 on chromosome 7q32, we found evidence of association with replication (1.1 × 10−7 < Poverall < 1.6 × 10−23; odds ratio = 0.82–1.62) in four regions: 16p11.2 (ITGAM), 11p15.5 (KIAA1542), 3p14.3 (PXK) and 1q25.1 (rs10798269). We also found evidence for association (P < 1 × 10−5) at FCGR2A, PTPN22 and STAT4, regions previously associated with SLE and other autoimmune diseases, as well as at ⩾9 other loci (P < 2 × 10−7). Our results show that numerous genes, some with known immune-related functions, predispose to SLE.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study meta-analysis identifies seven new rheumatoid arthritis risk loci

Eli A. Stahl; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Elaine F. Remmers; Gang Xie; Stephen Eyre; Brian Thomson; Yonghong Li; Fina Kurreeman; Alexandra Zhernakova; Anne Hinks; Candace Guiducci; Robert Chen; Lars Alfredsson; Christopher I. Amos; Kristin Ardlie; Anne Barton; John Bowes; Elisabeth Brouwer; Noël P. Burtt; Joseph J. Catanese; Jonathan S. Coblyn; Marieke J. H. Coenen; Karen H. Costenbader; Lindsey A. Criswell; J. Bart A. Crusius; Jing Cui; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Philip L. De Jager; Bo Ding; Paul Emery

To identify new genetic risk factors for rheumatoid arthritis, we conducted a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of 5,539 autoantibody-positive individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (cases) and 20,169 controls of European descent, followed by replication in an independent set of 6,768 rheumatoid arthritis cases and 8,806 controls. Of 34 SNPs selected for replication, 7 new rheumatoid arthritis risk alleles were identified at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8) in an analysis of all 41,282 samples. The associated SNPs are near genes of known immune function, including IL6ST, SPRED2, RBPJ, CCR6, IRF5 and PXK. We also refined associations at two established rheumatoid arthritis risk loci (IL2RA and CCL21) and confirmed the association at AFF3. These new associations bring the total number of confirmed rheumatoid arthritis risk loci to 31 among individuals of European ancestry. An additional 11 SNPs replicated at P < 0.05, many of which are validated autoimmune risk alleles, suggesting that most represent genuine rheumatoid arthritis risk alleles.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Association of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus with C8orf13–BLK and ITGAM–ITGAX

Geoffrey Hom; Robert R. Graham; Barmak Modrek; Kimberly E. Taylor; Ward Ortmann; Sophie Garnier; Annette Lee; Sharon A. Chung; Ricardo C. Ferreira; P.V. Krishna Pant; Dennis G. Ballinger; Roman Kosoy; F. Yesim Demirci; M. Ilyas Kamboh; Amy H. Kao; Chao Tian; Iva Gunnarsson; Anders Bengtsson; Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist; Michelle Petri; Susan Manzi; Michael F. Seldin; Lars Rönnblom; Ann-Christine Syvänen; Lindsey A. Criswell; Peter K. Gregersen; Timothy W. Behrens

BACKGROUND Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a clinically heterogeneous disease in which the risk of disease is influenced by complex genetic and environmental contributions. Alleles of HLA-DRB1, IRF5, and STAT4 are established susceptibility genes; there is strong evidence for the existence of additional risk loci. METHODS We genotyped more than 500,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in DNA samples from 1311 case subjects with SLE and 1783 control subjects; all subjects were North Americans of European descent. Genotypes from 1557 additional control subjects were obtained from public data repositories. We measured the association between the SNPs and SLE after applying strict quality-control filters to reduce technical artifacts and to correct for the presence of population stratification. Replication of the top loci was performed in 793 case subjects and 857 control subjects from Sweden. RESULTS Genetic variation in the region upstream from the transcription initiation site of the gene encoding B lymphoid tyrosine kinase (BLK) and C8orf13 (chromosome 8p23.1) was associated with disease risk in both the U.S. and Swedish case-control series (rs13277113; odds ratio, 1.39; P=1x10(-10)) and also with altered levels of messenger RNA in B-cell lines. In addition, variants on chromosome 16p11.22, near the genes encoding integrin alpha M (ITGAM, or CD11b) and integrin alpha X (ITGAX), were associated with SLE in the combined sample (rs11574637; odds ratio, 1.33; P=3x10(-11)). CONCLUSIONS We identified and then confirmed through replication two new genetic loci for SLE: a promoter-region allele associated with reduced expression of BLK and increased expression of C8orf13 and variants in the ITGAM-ITGAX region.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Genetic association of the R620W polymorphism of protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22 with human SLE

Chieko Kyogoku; Carl D. Langefeld; Ward Ortmann; Annette Lee; Scott Selby; Victoria E.H. Carlton; Monica Chang; Paula S. Ramos; Emily C. Baechler; Franak Batliwalla; Jill Novitzke; Adrienne H. Williams; Clarence Gillett; Peter R. Rodine; Robert R. Graham; Kristin Ardlie; Patrick M. Gaffney; Kathy L. Moser; Michelle Petri; Ann B. Begovich; Peter K. Gregersen; Timothy W. Behrens

We genotyped 525 independent North American white individuals with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) for the PTPN22 R620W polymorphism and compared the results with data generated from 1,961 white control individuals. The R620W SNP was associated with SLE (genotypic P=.00009), with estimated minor (T) allele frequencies of 12.67% in SLE cases and 8.64% in controls. A single copy of the T allele (W620) increases risk of SLE (odds ratio [OR]=1.37; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07-1.75), and two copies of the allele more than double this risk (OR=4.37; 95% CI 1.98-9.65). Together with recent evidence showing association of this SNP with type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis, these data provide compelling evidence that PTPN22 plays a fundamental role in regulating the immune system and the development of autoimmunity.


Nature Genetics | 2009

A large-scale replication study identifies TNIP1, PRDM1, JAZF1, UHRF1BP1 and IL10 as risk loci for systemic lupus erythematosus

Vesela Gateva; Johanna K. Sandling; Geoff Hom; Kimberly E. Taylor; Sharon A. Chung; Xin Sun; Ward Ortmann; Roman Kosoy; Ricardo C. Ferreira; Gunnel Nordmark; Iva Gunnarsson; Elisabet Svenungsson; Leonid Padyukov; Gunnar Sturfelt; Andreas Jönsen; Anders Bengtsson; Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist; Emily C. Baechler; Elizabeth E. Brown; Graciela S. Alarcón; Jeffrey C. Edberg; Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman; Gerald McGwin; John D. Reveille; Luis M. Vilá; Robert P. Kimberly; Susan Manzi; Michelle Petri; Annette Lee; Peter K. Gregersen

Genome-wide association studies have recently identified at least 15 susceptibility loci for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). To confirm additional risk loci, we selected SNPs from 2,466 regions that showed nominal evidence of association to SLE (P < 0.05) in a genome-wide study and genotyped them in an independent sample of 1,963 cases and 4,329 controls. This replication effort identified five new SLE susceptibility loci (P < 5 × 10−8): TNIP1 (odds ratio (OR) = 1.27), PRDM1 (OR = 1.20), JAZF1 (OR = 1.20), UHRF1BP1 (OR = 1.17) and IL10 (OR = 1.19). We identified 21 additional candidate loci with P≤ 1 × 10−5. A candidate screen of alleles previously associated with other autoimmune diseases suggested five loci (P < 1 × 10−3) that may contribute to SLE: IFIH1, CFB, CLEC16A, IL12B and SH2B3. These results expand the number of confirmed and candidate SLE susceptibility loci and implicate several key immunologic pathways in SLE pathogenesis.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Two independent alleles at 6q23 associated with risk of rheumatoid arthritis

Robert M. Plenge; Chris Cotsapas; Leela Davies; Alkes L. Price; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Julian Maller; Itsik Pe'er; Noël P. Burtt; Brendan Blumenstiel; Matt DeFelice; Melissa Parkin; Rachel Barry; Wendy Winslow; Claire Healy; Robert R. Graham; Benjamin M. Neale; Elena Izmailova; Ronenn Roubenoff; Alex Parker; Roberta Glass; Elizabeth W. Karlson; Nancy E. Maher; David A. Hafler; David M. Lee; Michael F. Seldin; Elaine F. Remmers; Annette Lee; Leonid Padyukov; Lars Alfredsson; Jonathan S. Coblyn

To identify susceptibility alleles associated with rheumatoid arthritis, we genotyped 397 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis for 116,204 SNPs and carried out an association analysis in comparison to publicly available genotype data for 1,211 related individuals from the Framingham Heart Study. After evaluating and adjusting for technical and population biases, we identified a SNP at 6q23 (rs10499194, ∼150 kb from TNFAIP3 and OLIG3) that was reproducibly associated with rheumatoid arthritis both in the genome-wide association (GWA) scan and in 5,541 additional case-control samples (P = 10−3, GWA scan; P < 10−6, replication; P = 10−9, combined). In a concurrent study, the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) has reported strong association of rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility to a different SNP located 3.8 kb from rs10499194 (rs6920220; P = 5 × 10−6 in WTCCC). We show that these two SNP associations are statistically independent, are each reproducible in the comparison of our data and WTCCC data, and define risk and protective haplotypes for rheumatoid arthritis at 6q23.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Replication of Putative Candidate-Gene Associations with Rheumatoid Arthritis in >4,000 Samples from North America and Sweden: Association of Susceptibility with PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4

Robert M. Plenge; Leonid Padyukov; Elaine F. Remmers; Shaun Purcell; Annette Lee; Elizabeth W. Karlson; Frederick Wolfe; Daniel L. Kastner; Lars Alfredsson; David Altshuler; Peter K. Gregersen; Lars Klareskog; John D. Rioux

Candidate-gene association studies in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have lead to encouraging yet apparently inconsistent results. One explanation for the inconsistency is insufficient power to detect modest effects in the context of a low prior probability of a true effect. To overcome this limitation, we selected alleles with an increased probability of a disease association, on the basis of a review of the literature on RA and other autoimmune diseases, and tested them for association with RA susceptibility in a sample collection powered to detect modest genetic effects. We tested 17 alleles from 14 genes in 2,370 RA cases and 1,757 controls from the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) and the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of Rheumatoid Arthritis (EIRA) collections. We found strong evidence of an association of PTPN22 with the development of anti-citrulline antibody-positive RA (odds ratio [OR] 1.49; P=.00002), using previously untested EIRA samples. We provide support for an association of CTLA4 (CT60 allele, OR 1.23; P=.001) and PADI4 (PADI4_94, OR 1.24; P=.001) with the development of RA, but only in the NARAC cohort. The CTLA4 association is stronger in patients with RA from both cohorts who are seropositive for anti-citrulline antibodies (P=.0006). Exploration of our data set with clinically relevant subsets of RA reveals that PTPN22 is associated with an earlier age at disease onset (P=.004) and that PTPN22 has a stronger effect in males than in females (P=.03). A meta-analysis failed to demonstrate an association of the remaining alleles with RA susceptibility, suggesting that the previously published associations may represent false-positive results. Given the strong statistical power to replicate a true-positive association in this study, our results provide support for PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4 as RA susceptibility genes and demonstrate novel associations with clinically relevant subsets of RA.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Common variants at CD40 and other loci confer risk of rheumatoid arthritis

Soumya Raychaudhuri; Elaine F. Remmers; Annette Lee; Rachel Hackett; Candace Guiducci; Noël P. Burtt; Lauren Gianniny; Benjamin D. Korman; Leonid Padyukov; Fina Kurreeman; Monica Chang; Joseph J. Catanese; Bo Ding; Sandra Wong; Annette H. M. van der Helm-van Mil; Benjamin M. Neale; Jonathan S. Coblyn; Jing Cui; Paul P. Tak; Gert Jan Wolbink; J. Bart A. Crusius; Irene E. van der Horst-Bruinsma; Lindsey A. Criswell; Christopher I. Amos; Michael F. Seldin; Daniel L. Kastner; Kristin Ardlie; Lars Alfredsson; Karen H. Costenbader; David Altshuler

To identify rheumatoid arthritis risk loci in European populations, we conducted a meta-analysis of two published genome-wide association (GWA) studies totaling 3,393 cases and 12,462 controls. We genotyped 31 top-ranked SNPs not previously associated with rheumatoid arthritis in an independent replication of 3,929 autoantibody-positive rheumatoid arthritis cases and 5,807 matched controls from eight separate collections. We identified a common variant at the CD40 gene locus (rs4810485, P = 0.0032 replication, P = 8.2 × 10−9 overall, OR = 0.87). Along with other associations near TRAF1 (refs. 2,3) and TNFAIP3 (refs. 4,5), this implies a central role for the CD40 signaling pathway in rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis. We also identified association at the CCL21 gene locus (rs2812378, P = 0.00097 replication, P = 2.8 × 10−7 overall), a gene involved in lymphocyte trafficking. Finally, we identified evidence of association at four additional gene loci: MMEL1-TNFRSF14 (rs3890745, P = 0.0035 replication, P = 1.1 × 10−7 overall), CDK6 (rs42041, P = 0.010 replication, P = 4.0 × 10−6 overall), PRKCQ (rs4750316, P = 0.0078 replication, P = 4.4 × 10−6 overall), and KIF5A-PIP4K2C (rs1678542, P = 0.0026 replication, P = 8.8 × 10−8 overall).


Nature | 2010

Genome-wide association study in alopecia areata implicates both innate and adaptive immunity

Lynn Petukhova; Madeleine Duvic; Maria K. Hordinsky; David A. Norris; Vera H. Price; Yutaka Shimomura; Hyunmi Kim; Pallavi Singh; Annette Lee; Wei Chen; Katja C. Meyer; Ralf Paus; Colin A. B. Jahoda; Christopher I. Amos; Peter K. Gregersen; Angela M. Christiano

Alopecia areata (AA) is among the most highly prevalent human autoimmune diseases, leading to disfiguring hair loss due to the collapse of immune privilege of the hair follicle and subsequent autoimmune attack. The genetic basis of AA is largely unknown. We undertook a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in a sample of 1,054 cases and 3,278 controls and identified 139 single nucleotide polymorphisms that are significantly associated with AA (P ≤ 5 × 10−7). Here we show an association with genomic regions containing several genes controlling the activation and proliferation of regulatory T cells (Treg cells), cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4), interleukin (IL)-2/IL-21, IL-2 receptor A (IL-2RA; CD25) and Eos (also known as Ikaros family zinc finger 4; IKZF4), as well as the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region. We also find association evidence for regions containing genes expressed in the hair follicle itself (PRDX5 and STX17). A region of strong association resides within the ULBP (cytomegalovirus UL16-binding protein) gene cluster on chromosome 6q25.1, encoding activating ligands of the natural killer cell receptor NKG2D that have not previously been implicated in an autoimmune disease. By probing the role of ULBP3 in disease pathogenesis, we also show that its expression in lesional scalp from patients with AA is markedly upregulated in the hair follicle dermal sheath during active disease. This study provides evidence for the involvement of both innate and acquired immunity in the pathogenesis of AA. We have defined the genetic underpinnings of AA, placing it within the context of shared pathways among autoimmune diseases, and implicating a novel disease mechanism, the upregulation of ULBP ligands, in triggering autoimmunity.

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Peter K. Gregersen

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Leonid Padyukov

Karolinska University Hospital

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Houman Khalili

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Wentian Li

North Shore-LIJ Health System

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Elaine F. Remmers

National Institutes of Health

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