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Featured researches published by C. ng Yu.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Gene copy-number variation and associated polymorphisms of complement component C4 in human systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE): low copy number is a risk factor for and high copy number is a protective factor against SLE susceptibility in European Americans.

Yan Yang; Erwin K. Chung; Yee Ling Wu; Stephanie L. Savelli; Haikady N. Nagaraja; Bi Zhou; Maddie Hebert; Karla N. Jones; Yaoling Shu; Kathryn J. Kitzmiller; Carol A. Blanchong; Kim L. McBride; Gloria C. Higgins; Robert M. Rennebohm; Robert R. Rice; Kevin V. Hackshaw; Robert Roubey; Jennifer M. Grossman; Betty P. Tsao; Daniel J. Birmingham; Brad H. Rovin; Lee A. Hebert; C. Yung Yu

Interindividual gene copy-number variation (CNV) of complement component C4 and its associated polymorphisms in gene size (long and short) and protein isotypes (C4A and C4B) probably lead to different susceptibilities to autoimmune disease. We investigated the C4 gene CNV in 1,241 European Americans, including patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), their first-degree relatives, and unrelated healthy subjects, by definitive genotyping and phenotyping techniques. The gene copy number (GCN) varied from 2 to 6 for total C4, from 0 to 5 for C4A, and from 0 to 4 for C4B. Four copies of total C4, two copies of C4A, and two copies of C4B were the most common GCN counts, but each constituted only between one-half and three-quarters of the study populations. Long C4 genes were strongly correlated with C4A (R=0.695; P<.0001). Short C4 genes were correlated with C4B (R=0.437; P<.0001). In comparison with healthy subjects, patients with SLE clearly had the GCN of total C4 and C4A shifting to the lower side. The risk of SLE disease susceptibility significantly increased among subjects with only two copies of total C4 (patients 9.3%; unrelated controls 1.5%; odds ratio [OR] = 6.514; P=.00002) but decreased in those with > or =5 copies of C4 (patients 5.79%; controls 12%; OR=0.466; P=.016). Both zero copies (OR=5.267; P=.001) and one copy (OR=1.613; P=.022) of C4A were risk factors for SLE, whereas > or =3 copies of C4A appeared to be protective (OR=0.574; P=.012). Family-based association tests suggested that a specific haplotype with a single short C4B in tight linkage disequilibrium with the -308A allele of TNFA was more likely to be transmitted to patients with SLE. This work demonstrates how gene CNV and its related polymorphisms are associated with the susceptibility to a human complex disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Sex-specific association of X-linked Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) with male systemic lupus erythematosus

Nan Shen; Qiong Fu; Yun Deng; Xiaoxia Qian; Jian Zhao; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Yee Ling Wu; C. Yung Yu; Yuanjia Tang; Ji-Yih Chen; Wanling Yang; Maida Wong; Aya Kawasaki; Naoyuki Tsuchiya; Takayuki Sumida; Yasushi Kawaguchi; Hwee Siew Howe; Mo Yin Mok; So-Young Bang; Fei-Lan Liu; Deh-Ming Chang; Yoshinari Takasaki; Hiroshi Hashimoto; John B. Harley; Joel M. Guthridge; Jennifer M. Grossman; Rita M. Cantor; Yeong Wook Song; Sang-Cheol Bae; Shunle Chen

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multisystem, autoimmune disease that predominantly affects women. Previous findings that duplicated Toll-like receptor 7 (Tlr7) promotes lupus-like disease in male BXSB mice prompted us to evaluate TLR7 in human SLE. By using a candidate gene approach, we identified and replicated association of a TLR7 3′UTR SNP, rs3853839 (G/C), with SLE in 9,274 Eastern Asians (Pcombined = 6.5 × 10−10), with a stronger effect in male than female subjects [odds ratio, male vs. female = 2.33 (95% CI = 1.64–3.30) vs. 1.24 (95% CI = 1.14–1.34); P = 4.1 × 10−4]. G-allele carriers had increased TLR7 transcripts and more pronounced IFN signature than C-allele carriers; heterozygotes had 2.7-fold higher transcripts of G-allele than C-allele. These data established a functional polymorphism in type I IFN pathway gene TLR7 predisposing to SLE, especially in Chinese and Japanese male subjects.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2011

Association of a functional IRF7 variant with systemic lupus erythematosus

Qiong Fu; Jian Zhao; Xiaoxia Qian; Jonathan L. Wong; Kenneth M. Kaufman; C. Yung Yu; Hwee Siew Howe; Mo Yin Mok; John B. Harley; Joel M. Guthridge; Yeong Wook Song; Soo-Kyung Cho; Sang-Cheol Bae; Jennifer M. Grossman; Bevra H. Hahn; Frank C. Arnett; Nan Shen; Betty P. Tsao

OBJECTIVE A previous genome-wide association study conducted in a population of European ancestry identified rs4963128, a KIAA1542 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) 23 kb telomeric to IRF7 (the gene for interferon regulatory factor 7 [IRF-7]), to be strongly associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This study was undertaken to investigate whether genetic polymorphism within IRF7 is a risk factor for the development of SLE. METHODS We genotyped one KIAA1542 SNP (rs4963128) and one IRF7 SNP (rs1131665 [Q412R]) in an Asian population (1,302 cases, 1,479 controls), to assess their association with SLE. Subsequently, rs1131665 was further genotyped in independent panels of Chinese subjects (528 cases, 527 controls), European American subjects (446 cases, 461 controls), and African American subjects (159 cases, 115 controls) by TaqMan genotyping assay, to seek confirmation of association in various ethnic groups. A luciferase reporter assay was used to assess the effect of Q412R polymorphism on the activation of IRF-7. RESULTS Consistent association of rs1131665 (Q412R) with SLE was identified in Asian, European American, and African American populations (total 2,435 cases and 2,582 controls) (P(meta) = 6.18 × 10(-6) , odds ratio 1.42 [95% confidence interval 1.22-1.65]). Expression of the IRF7 412Q risk allele resulted in a 2-fold increase in interferon-stimulated response element transcriptional activity compared with expression of IRF7 412R (P = 0.0003), suggesting that IRF7 412Q confers elevated IRF-7 activity and may therefore affect a downstream interferon pathway. CONCLUSION These findings show that the major allele of a nonsynonymous SNP, rs1131665 (412Q) in IRF7, confers elevated activation of IRF-7 and predisposes to the development of SLE in multiple ethnic groups. This result provides direct genetic evidence that IRF7 may be a risk gene for human SLE.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Diversity in Intrinsic Strengths of the Human Complement System: Serum C4 Protein Concentrations Correlate with C4 Gene Size and Polygenic Variations, Hemolytic Activities, and Body Mass Index

Yan Yang; Erwin K. Chung; Bi Zhou; Carol A. Blanchong; C. Yung Yu; George Füst; Margit Kovács; Ágnes Vatay; Csaba Szalai; István Karádi; Lilian Varga

Among the genes and proteins of the human immune system, complement component C4 is extraordinary in its frequent germline variation in the size and number of genes. Definitive genotypic and phenotypic analyses were performed on a central European population to determine the C4 polygenic and gene size variations and their relationships with serum C4A and C4B protein concentrations and hemolytic activities. In a study population of 128 healthy subjects, the number of C4 genes present in a diploid genome varied between two to five, and 77.4% of the C4 genes belonged to the long form that contains the endogenous retrovirus HERV-K(C4). Intriguingly, higher C4 serum protein levels and higher C4 hemolytic activities were often detected in subjects with short C4 genes than those with long genes only, suggesting a negative epistatic effect of HERV-K(C4) on the expression of C4 proteins. Also, the body mass index appeared to affect the C4 serum levels, particularly in the individuals with medium or high C4 gene dosages, a phenomenon that was dissimilar in several aspects from the established correlation between body mass index and serum C3. As expected, there were strong, positive correlations between total C4 gene dosage and serum C4 protein concentrations, and between serum C4 protein concentrations and C4 hemolytic activities. There were also good correlations between the number of long genes with serum levels of C4A, and the number of short genes with serum levels of C4B. Thus, the polygenic and gene size variations of C4A and C4B contribute to the quantitative traits of C4 with a wide range of serum protein levels and hemolytic activities, and consequently the power of the innate defense system.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

A Dinucleotide Deletion in CD24 Confers Protection against Autoimmune Diseases

Lizhong Wang; Shili Lin; Kottil Rammohan; Zhenqiu Liu; Jin Qing Liu; Runhua Liu; Nikki Guinther; Judy Lima; Qunmin Zhou; Tony Wang; Xincheng Zheng; Daniel J. Birmingham; Brad H. Rovin; Lee A. Hebert; Yee Ling Wu; D. Joanne Lynn; Glenn Cooke; C. Yung Yu; Pan Zheng; Yang Liu

It is generally believed that susceptibility to both organ-specific and systemic autoimmune diseases is under polygenic control. Although multiple genes have been implicated in each type of autoimmune disease, few are known to have a significant impact on both. Here, we investigated the significance of polymorphisms in the human gene CD24 and the susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We used cases/control studies to determine the association between CD24 polymorphism and the risk of MS and SLE. In addition, we also considered transmission disequilibrium tests using family data from two cohorts consisting of a total of 150 pedigrees of MS families and 187 pedigrees of SLE families. Our analyses revealed that a dinucleotide deletion at position 1527∼1528 (P1527del) from the CD24 mRNA translation start site is associated with a significantly reduced risk (odds ratio = 0.54 with 95% confidence interval = 0.34–0.82) and delayed progression (p = 0.0188) of MS. Among the SLE cohort, we found a similar reduction of risk with the same polymorphism (odds ratio = 0.38, confidence interval = 0.22–0.62). More importantly, using 150 pedigrees of MS families from two independent cohorts and the TRANSMIT software, we found that the P1527del allele was preferentially transmitted to unaffected individuals (p = 0.002). Likewise, an analysis of 187 SLE families revealed the dinucleotide-deleted allele was preferentially transmitted to unaffected individuals (p = 0.002). The mRNA levels for the dinucleotide-deletion allele were 2.5-fold less than that of the wild-type allele. The dinucleotide deletion significantly reduced the stability of CD24 mRNA. Our results demonstrate that a destabilizing dinucleotide deletion in the 3′ UTR of CD24 mRNA conveys significant protection against both MS and SLE.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Sensitive and Specific Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Assays to Accurately Determine Copy Number Variations (CNVs) of Human Complement C4A, C4B, C4-Long, C4-Short, and RCCX Modules: Elucidation of C4 CNVs in 50 Consanguineous Subjects with Defined HLA Genotypes

Yee Ling Wu; Stephanie L. Savelli; Yan Yang; Bi Zhou; Brad H. Rovin; Daniel J. Birmingham; Haikady N. Nagaraja; Lee A. Hebert; C. Yung Yu

Recent comparative genome hybridization studies revealed that hundreds to thousands of human genomic loci can have interindividual copy number variations (CNVs). One of such CNV loci in the HLA codes for the immune effector protein complement component C4. Sensitive, specific, and accurate assays to interrogate the C4 CNV and its associated polymorphisms by using submicrogram quantities of genomic DNA are needed for high throughput epidemiologic studies of C4 CNVs in autoimmune, infectious, and neurological diseases. Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) assays were developed using TaqMan chemistry and based on sequences specific for C4A and C4B genes, structural characteristics corresponding to the long and short forms of C4 genes, and the breakpoint region of RP-C4-CYP21-TNX (RCCX) modular duplication. Assignments for gene copy numbers were achieved by relative standard curve methods using cloned C4 genomic DNA covering 6 logs of DNA concentrations for calibrations. The accuracies of test results were cross-confirmed internally in each sample, as the sum of C4A plus C4B equals to the sum of C4L plus C4S or the total copy number of RCCX modules. These qPCR assays were applied to determine C4 CNVs from samples of 50 consanguineous subjects who were mostly homozygous in HLA genotypes. The results revealed eight HLA haplotypes with single C4 genes in monomodular RCCX that are associated with multiple autoimmune and infectious diseases and 32 bimodular, 4 trimodular, and one quadrimodular RCCX. These C4 qPCR assays are proven to be robust, sensitive, and reliable, as they have contributed to the elucidation of C4 CNVs in >1000 human samples with autoimmune and neurological diseases.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Genetic Sophistication of Human Complement Components C4A and C4B and RP-C4-CYP21-TNX (RCCX) Modules in the Major Histocompatibility Complex

Erwin K. Chung; Yan Yang; Robert M. Rennebohm; Marja-Liisa Lokki; Gloria C. Higgins; Karla N. Jones; Bi Zhou; Carol A. Blanchong; C. Yung Yu

Human populations are endowed with a sophisticated genetic diversity of complement C4 and its flanking genes RP, CYP21, and TNX in the RCCX modules of the major histocompatibility complex class III region. We applied definitive techniques to elucidate (a) the complement C4 polymorphisms in gene sizes, gene numbers, and protein isotypes and (b) their gene orders. Several intriguing features are unraveled, including (1) a trimodular RCCX haplotype with three long C4 genes expressing C4A protein only, (2) two trimodular haplotypes with two long (L) and one short (S) C4 genes organized in LSL configurations, (3) a quadrimodular haplotype with four C4 genes organized in a SLSL configuration, and (4) another quadrimodular structure, with four long C4 genes (LLLL), that has the human leukocyte antigen haplotype that is identical to ancestral haplotype 7.2 in the Japanese population. Long-range PCR and PshAI-RFLP analyses conclusively revealed that the short genes from the LSL and SLSL haplotypes are C4A. In four informative families, an astonishingly complex pattern of genetic diversity for RCCX haplotypes with one, two, three and four C4 genes is demonstrated; each C4 gene may be long or short, encoding a C4A or C4B protein. Such diversity may be related to different intrinsic strengths among humans to defend against infections and susceptibilities to autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Complete Complement Components C4A and C4B Deficiencies in Human Kidney Diseases and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Yan Yang; Karl Lhotta; Erwin K. Chung; Paula Eder; Friedrich Neumair; C. Yung Yu

Although a heterozygous deficiency of either complement component C4A or C4B is common, and each has a frequency of ∼20% in a Caucasian population, complete deficiencies of both C4A and C4B proteins are extremely rare. In this paper the clinical courses for seven complete C4 deficiency patients are described in detail, and the molecular defects for complete C4 deficiencies are elucidated. Three patients with homozygous HLA A24 Cw7 B38 DR13 had systemic lupus erythematosus, mesangial glomerulonephritis, and severe skin lesions or membranous nephropathy. Immunofixation, genomic restriction fragment length polymorphisms, and pulsed field gel electrophoresis experiments revealed the presence of monomodular RP-C4-CYP21-TNX (RCCX) modules, each containing a solitary, long C4A mutant gene. Sequencing of the mutant C4A genes revealed a 2-bp, GT deletion in exon 13 that leads to protein truncation. The other four patients with homozygous HLA A30 B18 DR7 had SLE, severe kidney disorders including mesangial or membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, and/or Henoch Schoenlein purpura. Molecular genetic analyses revealed an unusual RCCX structure with two short C4B mutant genes, each followed by an intact gene for steroid 21-hydroxylase. Nine identical, intronic mutations were found in each mutant C4B. In particular, the 8127 g→a mutation present at the donor site of intron 28 may cause an RNA splice defect. Analyses of 12 complete C4 deficiency patients revealed two hot spots of deleterious mutations: one is located at exon 13, the others within a 2.6-kb genomic region spanning exons 20–29. Screening of these mutations may facilitate epidemiologic studies of C4 in infectious, autoimmune, and kidney diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Association of a common complement receptor 2 haplotype with increased risk of systemic lupus erythematosus

Hui Wu; Susan A. Boackle; Punchong Hanvivadhanakul; Daniela Ulgiati; Jennifer M. Grossman; Young-Ho Lee; Nan Shen; Lawrence J. Abraham; Timothy R. Mercer; Elly Park; Lee A. Hebert; Brad H. Rovin; Daniel J. Birmingham; Deh-Ming Chang; Chung-Jen Chen; Deborah McCurdy; Humeira Badsha; Bernard Yu-Hor Thong; Hiok Hee Chng; Frank C. Arnett; Daniel J. Wallace; C. Yung Yu; Bevra H. Hahn; Rita M. Cantor; Betty P. Tsao

A genomic region on distal mouse chromosome 1 and its syntenic human counterpart 1q23–42 show strong evidence of harboring lupus susceptibility genes. We found evidence of linkage at 1q32.2 in a targeted genome scan of 1q21–43 in 126 lupus multiplex families containing 151 affected sibpairs (nonparametric linkage score 2.52, P = 0.006). A positional candidate gene at 1q32.2, complement receptor 2 (CR2), is also a candidate in the murine Sle1c lupus susceptibility locus. To explore its role in human disease, we analyzed 1,416 individuals from 258 Caucasian and 142 Chinese lupus simplex families and demonstrated that a common three-single-nucleotide polymorphism CR2 haplotype (rs3813946, rs1048971, rs17615) was associated with lupus susceptibility (P = 0.00001) with a 1.54-fold increased risk for the development of disease. Single-nucleotide polymorphism 1 (rs3813946), located in the 5′ untranslated region of the CR2 gene, altered transcriptional activity, suggesting a potential mechanism by which CR2 could contribute to the development of lupus. Our findings reveal that CR2 is a likely susceptibility gene for human lupus at 1q32.2, extending previous studies suggesting that CR2 participates in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Determining the one, two, three, or four long and short loci of human complement C4 in a major histocompatibility complex haplotype encoding C4A or C4B proteins.

Erwin K. Chung; Yan Yang; Kristi L. Rupert; Karla N. Jones; Robert M. Rennebohm; Carol A. Blanchong; C. Yung Yu

The complex genetics of human complement C4 with unusually frequent variations in the size and number of C4A and C4B, as well as their neighboring genes, in the major histocompatibility complex has been a hurdle for accurate epidemiological studies of diseases associated with C4. A comprehensive series of novel or improved techniques has been developed to determine the total gene number of C4 and the relative dosages of C4A and C4B in a diploid genome. These techniques include (1) definitive genomic restriction-fragment-length polymorphisms (RFLPs) based on the discrete duplication patterns of the RCCX (RP-C4-CYP21-TNX) modules and on the specific nucleotide changes for C4A and C4B isotypes; (2) module-specific PCR to give information on the total number of C4 genes by comparing the relative quantities of RP1- or TNXB-specific fragments with TNXA-RP2 fragments; (3) labeled-primer single-cycle DNA polymerization procedure of amplified C4d genomic DNA for diagnostic RFLP analysis of C4A and C4B; and (4) a highly reproducible long-range-mapping method that employs PmeI-digested genomic DNA for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, to yield precise information on the number of long and short C4 genes in a haplotype. Applications of these vigorously tested techniques may clarify the roles that human C4A and C4B gene-dosage variations play in infectious and autoimmune diseases.

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Yan Yang

Ohio State University

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Bi Zhou

Ohio State University

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