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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin A. Raby is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin A. Raby.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of asthma in ethnically diverse North American populations

Dara G. Torgerson; Elizabeth J. Ampleford; Grace Y. Chiu; W. James Gauderman; Christopher R. Gignoux; Penelope E. Graves; Blanca E. Himes; A. Levin; Rasika A. Mathias; Dana B. Hancock; James W. Baurley; Celeste Eng; Debra A. Stern; Juan C. Celedón; Nicholas Rafaels; Daniel Capurso; David V. Conti; Lindsey A. Roth; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Alkis Togias; Xingnan Li; Rachel A. Myers; Isabelle Romieu; David Van Den Berg; Donglei Hu; Nadia N. Hansel; Ryan D. Hernandez; Elliott Israel; Muhammad T. Salam; Joshua M Galanter

Asthma is a common disease with a complex risk architecture including both genetic and environmental factors. We performed a meta-analysis of North American genome-wide association studies of asthma in 5,416 individuals with asthma (cases) including individuals of European American, African American or African Caribbean, and Latino ancestry, with replication in an additional 12,649 individuals from the same ethnic groups. We identified five susceptibility loci. Four were at previously reported loci on 17q21, near IL1RL1, TSLP and IL33, but we report for the first time, to our knowledge, that these loci are associated with asthma risk in three ethnic groups. In addition, we identified a new asthma susceptibility locus at PYHIN1, with the association being specific to individuals of African descent (P = 3.9 × 10−9). These results suggest that some asthma susceptibility loci are robust to differences in ancestry when sufficiently large samples sizes are investigated, and that ancestry-specific associations also contribute to the complex genetic architecture of asthma.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Genome-wide Association Analysis Identifies PDE4D as an Asthma-Susceptibility Gene

Blanca E. Himes; Gary M. Hunninghake; James W. Baurley; Nicholas Rafaels; Patrick Sleiman; David P. Strachan; Jemma B. Wilk; Saffron A. G. Willis-Owen; Barbara J. Klanderman; Jessica Lasky-Su; Ross Lazarus; Amy Murphy; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Lydiana Avila; Terri H. Beaty; Rasika A. Mathias; Ingo Ruczinski; Kathleen C. Barnes; Juan C. Celedón; William Cookson; W. James Gauderman; Frank D. Gilliland; Hakon Hakonarson; Christoph Lange; Miriam F. Moffatt; George T. O'Connor; Benjamin A. Raby; Edwin K. Silverman; Scott T. Weiss

Asthma, a chronic airway disease with known heritability, affects more than 300 million people around the world. A genome-wide association (GWA) study of asthma with 359 cases from the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP) and 846 genetically matched controls from the Illumina ICONdb public resource was performed. The strongest region of association seen was on chromosome 5q12 in PDE4D. The phosphodiesterase 4D, cAMP-specific (phosphodiesterase E3 dunce homolog, Drosophila) gene (PDE4D) is a regulator of airway smooth-muscle contractility, and PDE4 inhibitors have been developed as medications for asthma. Allelic p values for top SNPs in this region were 4.3 x 10(-07) for rs1588265 and 9.7 x 10(-07) for rs1544791. Replications were investigated in ten independent populations with different ethnicities, study designs, and definitions of asthma. In seven white and Hispanic replication populations, two PDE4D SNPs had significant results with p values less than 0.05, and five had results in the same direction as the original population but had p values greater than 0.05. Combined p values for 18,891 white and Hispanic individuals (4,342 cases) in our replication populations were 4.1 x 10(-04) for rs1588265 and 9.2 x 10(-04) for rs1544791. In three black replication populations, which had different linkage disequilibrium patterns than the other populations, original findings were not replicated. Further study of PDE4D variants might lead to improved understanding of the role of PDE4D in asthma pathophysiology and the efficacy of PDE4 inhibitor medications.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

MMP12, lung function, and COPD in high-risk populations.

Gary M. Hunninghake; Michael H. Cho; Yohannes Tesfaigzi; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Lydiana Avila; Jessica Lasky-Su; Chris Stidley; Erik Melén; Cilla Söderhäll; Jenny Hallberg; Inger Kull; Juha Kere; Magnus Svartengren; Göran Pershagen; Magnus Wickman; Christoph Lange; Dawn L. DeMeo; Craig P. Hersh; Barbara J. Klanderman; Benjamin A. Raby; David Sparrow; Steven D. Shapiro; Edwin K. Silverman; Augusto A. Litonjua; Scott T. Weiss; Juan C. Celedón

BACKGROUND Genetic variants influencing lung function in children and adults may ultimately lead to the development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), particularly in high-risk groups. METHODS We tested for an association between single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the gene encoding matrix metalloproteinase 12 (MMP12) and a measure of lung function (prebronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV(1)]) in more than 8300 subjects in seven cohorts that included children and adults. Within the Normative Aging Study (NAS), a cohort of initially healthy adult men, we tested for an association between SNPs that were associated with FEV(1) and the time to the onset of COPD. We then examined the relationship between MMP12 SNPs and COPD in two cohorts of adults with COPD or at risk for COPD. RESULTS The minor allele (G) of a functional variant in the promoter region of MMP12 (rs2276109 [-82A-->G]) was positively associated with FEV(1) in a combined analysis of children with asthma and adult former and current smokers in all cohorts (P=2x10(-6)). This allele was also associated with a reduced risk of the onset of COPD in the NAS cohort (hazard ratio, 0.65; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.46 to 0.92; P=0.02) and with a reduced risk of COPD in a cohort of smokers (odds ratio, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.45 to 0.88; P=0.005) and among participants in a family-based study of early-onset COPD (P=0.006). CONCLUSIONS The minor allele of a SNP in MMP12 (rs2276109) is associated with a positive effect on lung function in children with asthma and in adults who smoke. This allele is also associated with a reduced risk of COPD in adult smokers.


Genomics | 2003

Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the Toll-like receptor 9 gene (TLR9): frequencies, pairwise linkage disequilibrium, and haplotypes in three U.S. ethnic groups and exploratory case-control disease association studies.

Ross Lazarus; Walter T. Klimecki; Benjamin A. Raby; Donata Vercelli; Lyle J. Palmer; David J. Kwiatkowski; Edwin K. Silverman; Fernando D. Martinez; Scott T. Weiss

TLR9 is a mammalian Toll-like receptor homologue that appears to function as an innate immune pattern recognition protein for motifs that are far more common in bacterial than in mammalian DNA. The gene was sequenced in 71 subjects from three self-identified U.S. ethnic groups to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A total of 20 SNPs were found of which only 20% were in the public dbSNP database. Four SNPs were relatively common in all three ethnic samples. Using these four SNPs, seven distinct haplotypes were statistically inferred, of which four accounted for 75% or more chromosomes. These four haplotypes could be distinguished from each other by the alleles of two SNPs (-1237 and 2848). Five exploratory nested case-control disease-association studies (asthma, DVT, MI, and COPD in European Americans and asthma in African Americans) were performed by genotyping DNA collected from four ongoing cohort studies. There was evidence suggesting increased risk for asthma with a C allele at -1237 (odds ratio 1.85, 95%CI 1.05 to 3.25) among European Americans (genotypes available from 67 cases and 152 controls). No other significant disease associations were detected. Replication of this finding in other, larger samples is needed. This study suggests that there is substantial diversity in human TLR9, possibly associated with asthma in Europeans but not African Americans. No association was detected with three other diseases potentially related to innate immunity.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Allele-Specific Chromatin Remodeling in the ZPBP2/GSDMB/ORMDL3 Locus Associated with the Risk of Asthma and Autoimmune Disease

Dominique J. Verlaan; Soizik Berlivet; Gary M. Hunninghake; Anne-Marie Madore; Mathieu Larivière; Sanny Moussette; Elin Grundberg; Tony Kwan; Manon Ouimet; Bing Ge; Rose Hoberman; Marcin Swiatek; Joana Dias; Kevin C. L. Lam; Vonda Koka; Eef Harmsen; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Lydiana Avila; Juan C. Celedón; Scott T. Weiss; Ken Dewar; Daniel Sinnett; Catherine Laprise; Benjamin A. Raby; Tomi Pastinen; Anna K. Naumova

Common SNPs in the chromosome 17q12-q21 region alter the risk for asthma, type 1 diabetes, primary biliary cirrhosis, and Crohn disease. Previous reports by us and others have linked the disease-associated genetic variants with changes in expression of GSDMB and ORMDL3 transcripts in human lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs). The variants also alter regulation of other transcripts, and this domain-wide cis-regulatory effect suggests a mechanism involving long-range chromatin interactions. Here, we further dissect the disease-linked haplotype and identify putative causal DNA variants via a combination of genetic and functional analyses. First, high-throughput resequencing of the region and genotyping of potential candidate variants were performed. Next, additional mapping of allelic expression differences in Yoruba HapMap LCLs allowed us to fine-map the basis of the cis-regulatory differences to a handful of candidate functional variants. Functional assays identified allele-specific differences in nucleosome distribution, an allele-specific association with the insulator protein CTCF, as well as a weak promoter activity for rs12936231. Overall, this study shows a common disease allele linked to changes in CTCF binding and nucleosome occupancy leading to altered domain-wide cis-regulation. Finally, a strong association between asthma and cis-regulatory haplotypes was observed in three independent family-based cohorts (p = 1.78 x 10(-8)). This study demonstrates the requirement of multiple parallel allele-specific tools for the investigation of noncoding disease variants and functional fine-mapping of human disease-associated haplotypes.


Nature Genetics | 2005

Genomic screening and replication using the same data set in family-based association testing

Kristel Van Steen; Matthew B. McQueen; Alan Herbert; Benjamin A. Raby; Helen N. Lyon; Dawn L. DeMeo; Amy Murphy; Jessica Su; Soma Datta; Carsten Rosenow; Michael F. Christman; Edwin K. Silverman; Nan M. Laird; Scott T. Weiss; Christoph Lange

The Human Genome Project and its spin-offs are making it increasingly feasible to determine the genetic basis of complex traits using genome-wide association studies. The statistical challenge of analyzing such studies stems from the severe multiple-comparison problem resulting from the analysis of thousands of SNPs. Our methodology for genome-wide family-based association studies, using single SNPs or haplotypes, can identify associations that achieve genome-wide significance. In relation to developing guidelines for our screening tools, we determined lower bounds for the estimated power to detect the gene underlying the disease-susceptibility locus, which hold regardless of the linkage disequilibrium structure present in the data. We also assessed the power of our approach in the presence of multiple disease-susceptibility loci. Our screening tools accommodate genomic control and use the concept of haplotype-tagging SNPs. Our methods use the entire sample and do not require separate screening and validation samples to establish genome-wide significance, as population-based designs do.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

The Association of a SNP Upstream of INSIG2 with Body Mass Index is Reproduced in Several but Not All Cohorts

Helen N. Lyon; Valur Emilsson; Anke Hinney; Iris M. Heid; Jessica Lasky-Su; Xiaofeng Zhu; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Steinunn Gunnarsdottir; G. Bragi Walters; Unnur Thorsteinsdottir; Augustine Kong; Jeffrey R. Gulcher; Thuy Trang Nguyen; André Scherag; Arne Pfeufer; Thomas Meitinger; Günter Brönner; Winfried Rief; Manuel Soto-Quiros; Lydiana Avila; Barbara J. Klanderman; Benjamin A. Raby; Edwin K. Silverman; Scott T. Weiss; Nan M. Laird; Xiao Ding; Leif Groop; Tiinamaija Tuomi; Bo Isomaa; Kristina Bengtsson

A SNP upstream of the INSIG2 gene, rs7566605, was recently found to be associated with obesity as measured by body mass index (BMI) by Herbert and colleagues. The association between increased BMI and homozygosity for the minor allele was first observed in data from a genome-wide association scan of 86,604 SNPs in 923 related individuals from the Framingham Heart Study offspring cohort. The association was reproduced in four additional cohorts, but was not seen in a fifth cohort. To further assess the general reproducibility of this association, we genotyped rs7566605 in nine large cohorts from eight populations across multiple ethnicities (total n = 16,969). We tested this variant for association with BMI in each sample under a recessive model using family-based, population-based, and case-control designs. We observed a significant (p < 0.05) association in five cohorts but saw no association in three other cohorts. There was variability in the strength of association evidence across examination cycles in longitudinal data from unrelated individuals in the Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort. A combined analysis revealed significant independent validation of this association in both unrelated (p = 0.046) and family-based (p = 0.004) samples. The estimated risk conferred by this allele is small, and could easily be masked by small sample size, population stratification, or other confounders. These validation studies suggest that the original association is less likely to be spurious, but the failure to observe an association in every data set suggests that the effect of SNP rs7566605 on BMI may be heterogeneous across population samples.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2010

A Genome-Wide Association Study on African-Ancestry Populations For Asthma

Rasika A. Mathias; Audrey V. Grant; Nicholas Rafaels; Tracey Hand; Li Gao; Candelaria Vergara; Yuhjung J. Tsai; Mao Yang; Monica Campbell; Cassandra Foster; Peisong Gao; Alkis Togias; Nadia N. Hansel; Gregory B. Diette; N. Franklin Adkinson; Mark C. Liu; Mezbah U. Faruque; Georgia M. Dunston; Harold Watson; Michael B. Bracken; Josephine Hoh; Pissamai Maul; Trevor Maul; Anne E. Jedlicka; Tanda Murray; Jacqueline B. Hetmanski; Roxann Ashworth; Chrissie M. Ongaco; Kurt N. Hetrick; Kimberly F. Doheny

BACKGROUND Asthma is a complex disease characterized by striking ethnic disparities not explained entirely by environmental, social, cultural, or economic factors. Of the limited genetic studies performed on populations of African descent, notable differences in susceptibility allele frequencies have been observed. OBJECTIVES We sought to test the hypothesis that some genes might contribute to the profound disparities in asthma. METHODS We performed a genome-wide association study in 2 independent populations of African ancestry (935 African American asthmatic cases and control subjects from the Baltimore-Washington, DC, area and 929 African Caribbean asthmatic subjects and their family members from Barbados) to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with asthma. RESULTS A meta-analysis combining these 2 African-ancestry populations yielded 3 SNPs with a combined P value of less than 10(-5) in genes of potential biologic relevance to asthma and allergic disease: rs10515807, mapping to the alpha-1B-adrenergic receptor (ADRA1B) gene on chromosome 5q33 (3.57 x 10(-6)); rs6052761, mapping to the prion-related protein (PRNP) gene on chromosome 20pter-p12 (2.27 x 10(-6)); and rs1435879, mapping to the dipeptidyl peptidase 10 (DPP10) gene on chromosome 2q12.3-q14.2. The generalizability of these findings was tested in family and case-control panels of United Kingdom and German origin, respectively, but none of the associations observed in the African groups were replicated in these European studies. Evidence for association was also examined in 4 additional case-control studies of African Americans; however, none of the SNPs implicated in the discovery population were replicated. CONCLUSIONS This study illustrates the complexity of identifying true associations for a complex and heterogeneous disease, such as asthma, in admixed populations, especially populations of African descent.


Genomics | 2009

Genetic association analysis of copy-number variation (CNV) in human disease pathogenesis.

Iuliana Ionita-Laza; Angela J. Rogers; Christoph Lange; Benjamin A. Raby; Charles Lee

Structural genetic variation, including copy-number variation (CNV), constitutes a substantial fraction of total genetic variability and the importance of structural genetic variants in modulating human disease is increasingly being recognized. Early successes in identifying disease-associated CNVs via a candidate gene approach mandate that future disease association studies need to include structural genetic variation. Such analyses should not rely on previously developed methodologies that were designed to evaluate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Instead, development of novel technical, statistical, and epidemiologic methods will be necessary to optimally capture this newly-appreciated form of genetic variation in a meaningful manner.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

TBX21: A functional variant predicts improvement in asthma with the use of inhaled corticosteroids

Kelan G. Tantisira; Eun Sook Hwang; Benjamin A. Raby; Eric S. Silverman; Stephen Lake; Brent Richter; Stanford L. Peng; Jeffrey M. Drazen; Laurie H. Glimcher; Scott T. Weiss

TBX21 encodes for the transcription factor T-bet (T-box expressed in T cells), which influences naïve T lymphocyte development and has been implicated in asthma pathogenesis. Specifically, the T-bet knockout mouse spontaneously develops airway hyperresponsiveness and other changes consistent with asthma. Because airway responsiveness is moderated by the use of inhaled corticosteroids in asthma, it is conceivable that genetic variation in TBX21 may alter asthma phenotypes in a treatment-specific fashion. Here we demonstrate that the nonsynonymous variation in TBX21 coding for replacement of histidine 33 with glutamine is associated with significant improvement in the PC20 (a measure of airway responsiveness) of asthmatic children in a large clinical trial spanning 4 years. We note that this increase occurs only in the children randomized to inhaled corticosteroids and that it dramatically enhances the overall improvement in PC20 associated with inhaled corticosteroid usage. The average PC20 at trial end for subjects on inhaled corticosteroids possessing a variant allele was in the normal range for nonasthmatics. In cellular models, we show that the TBX21 variant increases T helper 1 and decreases T helper 2 cytokine expression comparably with wild type. TBX21 may thus be an important determinant pharmacogenetic response to the therapy of asthma with inhaled corticosteroids.

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Scott T. Weiss

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Edwin K. Silverman

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jessica Lasky-Su

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Vincent J. Carey

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Kelan G. Tantisira

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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