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Dive into the research topics where James T. Elder is active.

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Featured researches published by James T. Elder.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Genome-wide scan reveals association of psoriasis with IL-23 and NF-κB pathways.

Rajan P. Nair; Kristina Callis Duffin; Cynthia Helms; Jun Ding; Philip E. Stuart; David E. Goldgar; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Yun Li; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Bing Jian Feng; Andreas Ruether; Stefan Schreiber; Michael Weichenthal; Dafna D. Gladman; Proton Rahman; Steven J. Schrodi; Sampath Prahalad; Stephen L. Guthery; Judith Fischer; Wilson Liao; Pui-Yan Kwok; Alan Menter; G. Mark Lathrop; Carol A. Wise; Ann B. Begovich; John J. Voorhees; James T. Elder; Gerald G. Krueger; Anne M. Bowcock; Gonçalo R. Abecasis

Psoriasis is a common immune-mediated disorder that affects the skin, nails and joints. To identify psoriasis susceptibility loci, we genotyped 438,670 SNPs in 1,409 psoriasis cases and 1,436 controls of European ancestry. We followed up 21 promising SNPs in 5,048 psoriasis cases and 5,041 controls. Our results provide strong support for the association of at least seven genetic loci and psoriasis (each with combined P < 5 × 10−8). Loci with confirmed association include HLA-C, three genes involved in IL-23 signaling (IL23A, IL23R, IL12B), two genes that act downstream of TNF-α and regulate NF-κB signaling (TNIP1, TNFAIP3) and two genes involved in the modulation of Th2 immune responses (IL4, IL13). Although the proteins encoded in these loci are known to interact biologically, we found no evidence for epistasis between associated SNPs. Our results expand the catalog of genetic loci implicated in psoriasis susceptibility and suggest priority targets for study in other auto-immune disorders.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

Sequence and Haplotype Analysis Supports HLA-C as the Psoriasis Susceptibility 1 Gene

Rajan P. Nair; Philip E. Stuart; Ioana Nistor; Ravi Hiremagalore; Nicholas V.C. Chia; Stefan Jenisch; Michael Weichenthal; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Henry W. Lim; Enno Christophers; John J. Voorhees; James T. Elder

Previous studies have narrowed the interval containing PSORS1, the psoriasis-susceptibility locus in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), to an approximately 300-kb region containing HLA-C and at least 10 other genes. In an effort to identify the PSORS1 gene, we cloned and completely sequenced this region from both chromosomes of five individuals. Two of the sequenced haplotypes were associated with psoriasis (risk), and the other eight were clearly unassociated (nonrisk). Comparison of sequence of the two risk haplotypes identified a 298-kb region of homology, extending from just telomeric of HLA-B to the HCG22 gene, which was flanked by clearly nonhomologous regions. Similar haplotypes cloned from unrelated individuals had nearly identical sequence. Combinatorial analysis of exonic variations in the known genes of the candidate interval revealed that HCG27, PSORS1C3, OTF3, TCF19, HCR, STG, and HCG22 bore no alleles unique to risk haplotypes among the 10 sequenced haplotypes. SPR1 and SEEK1 both had messenger RNA alleles specific to risk haplotypes, but only HLA-C and CDSN yielded protein alleles unique to risk. The risk alleles of HLA-C and CDSN (HLA-Cw6 and CDSN*TTC) were genotyped in 678 families with early-onset psoriasis; 620 of these families were also typed for 34 microsatellite markers spanning the PSORS1 interval. Recombinant haplotypes retaining HLA-Cw6 but lacking CDSN*TTC were significantly associated with psoriasis, whereas recombinants retaining CDSN*TTC but lacking HLA-Cw6 were not associated, despite good statistical power. By grouping recombinants with similar breakpoints, the most telomeric quarter of the 298-kb candidate interval could be excluded with high confidence. These results strongly suggest that HLA-Cw6 is the PSORS1 risk allele that confers susceptibility to early-onset psoriasis.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Deletion of the late cornified envelope LCE3B and LCE3C genes as a susceptibility factor for psoriasis.

Rafael de Cid; Eva Riveira-Munoz; Patrick L.J.M. Zeeuwen; Jason Robarge; Wilson Liao; Emma N. Dannhauser; Emiliano Giardina; Philip E. Stuart; Rajan P. Nair; Cynthia Helms; Geòrgia Escaramís; Ester Ballana; Gemma Martín-Ezquerra; Martin den Heijer; Marijke Kamsteeg; Irma Joosten; Evan E. Eichler; Conxi Lázaro; Ramon M. Pujol; Lluís Armengol; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; James T. Elder; Giuseppe Novelli; John A.L. Armour; Pui-Yan Kwok; Anne M. Bowcock; Joost Schalkwijk; Xavier Estivill

Psoriasis is a common inflammatory skin disease with a prevalence of 2–3% in individuals of European ancestry. In a genome-wide search for copy number variants (CNV) using a sample pooling approach, we have identified a deletion comprising LCE3B and LCE3C, members of the late cornified envelope (LCE) gene cluster. The absence of LCE3B and LCE3C (LCE3C_LCE3B-del) is significantly associated (P = 1.38E–08) with risk of psoriasis in 2,831 samples from Spain, The Netherlands, Italy and the United States, and in a family-based study (P = 5.4E–04). LCE3C_LCE3B-del is tagged by rs4112788 (r 2 = 0.93), which is also strongly associated with psoriasis (P < 6.6E–09). LCE3C_LCE3B-del shows epistatic effects with the HLA-Cw6 allele on the development of psoriasis in Dutch samples and multiplicative effects in the other samples. LCE expression can be induced in normal epidermis by skin barrier disruption and is strongly expressed in psoriatic lesions, suggesting that compromised skin barrier function has a role in psoriasis susceptibility.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Pervasive sharing of genetic effects in autoimmune disease.

Chris Cotsapas; Benjamin F. Voight; Elizabeth Rossin; Kasper Lage; Benjamin M. Neale; Chris Wallace; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Timothy W. Behrens; Judy H. Cho; Philip L. De Jager; James T. Elder; Robert R. Graham; Peter K. Gregersen; Lars Klareskog; Katherine A. Siminovitch; David A. van Heel; Cisca Wijmenga; Jane Worthington; John A. Todd; David A. Hafler; Stephen S. Rich; Mark J. Daly

Genome-wide association (GWA) studies have identified numerous, replicable, genetic associations between common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and risk of common autoimmune and inflammatory (immune-mediated) diseases, some of which are shared between two diseases. Along with epidemiological and clinical evidence, this suggests that some genetic risk factors may be shared across diseases—as is the case with alleles in the Major Histocompatibility Locus. In this work we evaluate the extent of this sharing for 107 immune disease-risk SNPs in seven diseases: celiac disease, Crohns disease, multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and type 1 diabetes. We have developed a novel statistic for Cross Phenotype Meta-Analysis (CPMA) which detects association of a SNP to multiple, but not necessarily all, phenotypes. With it, we find evidence that 47/107 (44%) immune-mediated disease risk SNPs are associated to multiple—but not all—immune-mediated diseases (SNP-wise P CPMA<0.01). We also show that distinct groups of interacting proteins are encoded near SNPs which predispose to the same subsets of diseases; we propose these as the mechanistic basis of shared disease risk. We are thus able to leverage genetic data across diseases to construct biological hypotheses about the underlying mechanism of pathogenesis.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Induction of IL-17+ T Cell Trafficking and Development by IFN-γ: Mechanism and Pathological Relevance in Psoriasis

Ilona Kryczek; Allen T. Bruce; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Andrew Johnston; Abhishek Aphale; Linhua Vatan; Wojciech Szeliga; Yin Wang; Yan Liu; Theodore H. Welling; James T. Elder; Weiping Zou

Th1 and Th17 T cells are often colocalized in pathological environments, yet Th1-derived IFN-γ inhibits Th17 cell development in vitro. We explored the physiologic basis of this paradox in humans. In this study, we demonstrate increased the number of CD4+ and CD8+ IL-17+ T cells in skin lesions of psoriasis. Furthermore, we show that myeloid APCs potently support induction of IL-17+ T cells, and that this activity is greatly increased in psoriasis. We tested stimuli that might account for this activity. Th1 cells and IFN-γ are increased in psoriatic blood and lesional skin. We show that IFN-γ programs myeloid APCs to induce human IL-17+ T cells via IL-1 and IL-23. IFN-γ also stimulates APC production of CCL20, supporting migration of IL-17+ T cells, and synergizes with IL-17 in the production of human β-defensin 2, an antimicrobial and chemotactic protein highly overexpressed by psoriatic keratinocytes. This study reveals a novel mechanistic interaction between Th1 and IL-17+ T cells, challenges the view that Th1 cells suppress Th17 development through IFN-γ, and suggests that Th1 and IL-17+ T cells may collaboratively contribute to human autoimmune diseases.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study identifies a psoriasis susceptibility locus at TRAF3IP2.

Eva Ellinghaus; David Ellinghaus; Philip E. Stuart; Rajan P. Nair; Sophie Debrus; John V. Raelson; Majid Belouchi; Helene Fournier; Claudia Reinhard; Jun Ding; Yun Li; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Stefan W. Stoll; John J. Voorhees; Sylviane Lambert; Stephan Weidinger; Bernadette Eberlein; Manfred Kunz; Proton Rahman; Dafna D. Gladman; Christian Gieger; H.-Erich Wichmann; Tom H. Karlsen; Gabriele Mayr; Mario Albrecht; Dieter Kabelitz; Ulrich Mrowietz; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; James T. Elder

Psoriasis is a multifactorial skin disease characterized by epidermal hyperproliferation and chronic inflammation, the most common form of which is psoriasis vulgaris (PsV). We present a genome-wide association analysis of 2,339,118 SNPs in 472 PsV cases and 1,146 controls from Germany, with follow-up of the 147 most significant SNPs in 2,746 PsV cases and 4,140 controls from three independent replication panels. We identified an association at TRAF3IP2 on 6q21 and genotyped two SNPs at this locus in two additional replication panels (the combined discovery and replication panels consisted of 6,487 cases and 8,037 controls; combined P = 2.36 × 10−10 for rs13210247 and combined P = 1.24 × 10−16 for rs33980500). About 15% of psoriasis cases develop psoriatic arthritis (PsA). A stratified analysis of our datasets including only PsA cases (1,922 cases compared to 8,037 controls, P = 4.57 × 10−12 for rs33980500) suggested that TRAF3IP2 represents a shared susceptibility for PsV and PsA. TRAF3IP2 encodes a protein involved in IL-17 signaling and which interacts with members of the Rel/NF-κB transcription factor family.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Association analyses identify six new psoriasis susceptibility loci in the Chinese population

Liangdan Sun; Huaidong Cheng; Zaixing Wang; Anping Zhang; Pei-Guang Wang; Jinhua Xu; Zhu Qx; Haisheng Zhou; Eva Ellinghaus; Fu Ren Zhang; Xing‐Fu Pu; Yang Xq; Jianzhong Zhang; Aie Xu; Rina Wu; Liang Xu; Peng L; Cynthia Helms; Yunqing Ren; Chi Zhang; Shu Mei Zhang; Rajan P. Nair; Wang Hy; Guo Shu Lin; Philip E. Stuart; Xing Fan; Gang Chen; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Ping Li; Jun Zhu

We extended our previous genome-wide association study for psoriasis with a multistage replication study including 8,312 individuals with psoriasis (cases) and 12,919 controls from China as well as 3,293 cases and 4,188 controls from Germany and the United States and 254 nuclear families from the United States. We identified six new susceptibility loci associated with psoriasis in the Chinese study containing the candidate genes ERAP1, PTTG1, CSMD1, GJB2, SERPINB8 and ZNF816A (combined P < 5 × 10−8) and replicated one locus, 5q33.1 (TNIP1-ANXA6), previously reported (combined P = 3.8 × 10−21) in the European studies. Two of these loci showed evidence for association in the German study at ZNF816A and GJB2 with P = 3.6 × 10−3 and P = 7.9 × 10−3, respectively. ERAP1 and ZNF816A were associated with type 1 (early onset) psoriasis in the Chinese Han population (test for heterogeneity P = 6.5 × 10−3 and P = 1.5 × 10−3, respectively). Comparisons with the results of previous GWAS of psoriasis highlight the heterogeneity of disease susceptibility between the Chinese and European populations. Our study identifies new genetic susceptibility factors and suggests new biological pathways in psoriasis.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association analysis identifies three psoriasis susceptibility loci

Philip E. Stuart; Rajan P. Nair; Eva Ellinghaus; Jun Ding; Trilokraj Tejasvi; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Yun Li; Stephan Weidinger; Bernadette Eberlein; Christian Gieger; H.-Erich Wichmann; Manfred Kunz; Robert W. Ike; Gerald G. Krueger; Anne M. Bowcock; Ulrich Mrowietz; Henry W. Lim; John J. Voorhees; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Michael Weichenthal; Andre Franke; Proton Rahman; Dafna D. Gladman; James T. Elder

We carried out a meta-analysis of two recent psoriasis genome-wide association studies with a combined discovery sample of 1,831 affected individuals (cases) and 2,546 controls. One hundred and two loci selected based on P value rankings were followed up in a three-stage replication study including 4,064 cases and 4,685 controls from Michigan, Toronto, Newfoundland and Germany. In the combined meta-analysis, we identified three new susceptibility loci, including one at NOS2 (rs4795067, combined P = 4 × 10−11), one at FBXL19 (rs10782001, combined P = 9 × 10−10) and one near PSMA6-NFKBIA (rs12586317, combined P = 2 × 10−8). All three loci were also associated with psoriatic arthritis (rs4795067, combined P = 1 × 10−5; rs10782001, combined P = 4 × 10−8; and rs12586317, combined P = 6 × 10−5) and purely cutaneous psoriasis (rs4795067, combined P = 1 × 10−8; rs10782001, combined P = 2 × 10−6; and rs12586317, combined P = 1 × 10−6). We also replicated a recently identified association signal near RNF114 (rs495337, combined P = 2 × 10−7).


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010

Molecular dissection of psoriasis: integrating genetics and biology.

James T. Elder; Allen T. Bruce; Johann E. Gudjonsson; Andrew Johnston; Philip E. Stuart; Trilokraj Tejasvi; John J. Voorhees; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Rajan P. Nair

Psoriasis is a common and debilitating disease of the skin, nails, and joints, with an acknowledged but complex genetic basis. Early genome-wide linkage studies of psoriasis focused on segregation of microsatellite markers in families; however, the only locus consistently identified resided in the major histocompatibility complex. Subsequently, several groups mapped this locus to the vicinity of HLA-C, and two groups have reported HLA-Cw6 itself to be the major susceptibility allele. More recently, the development of millions of single-nucleotide polymorphisms, coupled with the development of high-throughput genotyping platforms and a comprehensive map of human haplotypes, has made possible a genome-wide association approach using cases and controls rather than families. Taking advantage of these developments, we participated in a collaborative genome-wide association study of psoriasis involving thousands of cases and controls. Initial analysis of these data revealed and/or confirmed association between psoriasis and seven genetic loci-HLA-C, IL12B, IL23R, IL23A, IL4/IL13, TNFAIP3, and TNIP1-and ongoing studies are revealing additional loci. Here, we review the epidemiology, immunopathology, and genetics of psoriasis, and present a disease model integrating its genetics and immunology.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Visualizing Human Leukocyte Antigen Class II Risk Haplotypes in Human Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Robert R. Graham; Ward Ortmann; Carl D. Langefeld; Damini Jawaheer; Scott Selby; Peter R. Rodine; Emily C. Baechler; Kristine E. Rohlf; Katherine B. Shark; Karl J. Espe; Linda E. Green; Rajan P. Nair; Philip E. Stuart; James T. Elder; Richard A. King; Kathy L. Moser; Patrick M. Gaffney; Teodorica L. Bugawan; Henry A. Erlich; Stephen S. Rich; Peter K. Gregersen; Timothy W. Behrens

Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I and class II alleles are implicated as genetic risk factors for many autoimmune diseases. However, the role of the HLA loci in human systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) remains unclear. Using a dense map of polymorphic microsatellites across the HLA region in a large collection of families with SLE, we identified three distinct haplotypes that encompassed the class II region and exhibited transmission distortion. DRB1 and DQB1 typing of founders showed that the three haplotypes contained DRB1*1501/ DQB1*0602, DRB1*0801/ DQB1*0402, and DRB1*0301/DQB1*0201 alleles, respectively. By visualizing ancestral recombinants, we narrowed the disease-associated haplotypes containing DRB1*1501 and DRB1*0801 to an approximately 500-kb region. We conclude that HLA class II haplotypes containing DRB1 and DQB1 alleles are strong risk factors for human SLE.

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Lam C. Tsoi

University of Michigan

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