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Dive into the research topics where Miles Parkes is active.

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Featured researches published by Miles Parkes.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Genome-wide association defines more than 30 distinct susceptibility loci for Crohn's disease

Jeffrey C. Barrett; Sarah Hansoul; Dan L. Nicolae; Judy H. Cho; Richard H. Duerr; John D. Rioux; Steven R. Brant; Mark S. Silverberg; Kent D. Taylor; M. Michael Barmada; Alain Bitton; Themistocles Dassopoulos; Lisa W. Datta; Todd Green; Anne M. Griffiths; Emily O. Kistner; Miguel Regueiro; Jerome I. Rotter; L. Philip Schumm; A. Hillary Steinhart; Stephan R. Targan; Ramnik J. Xavier; Cécile Libioulle; Cynthia Sandor; Mark Lathrop; Jacques Belaiche; Olivier Dewit; Ivo Gut; Simon Heath; Debby Laukens

Several risk factors for Crohns disease have been identified in recent genome-wide association studies. To advance gene discovery further, we combined data from three studies on Crohns disease (a total of 3,230 cases and 4,829 controls) and carried out replication in 3,664 independent cases with a mixture of population-based and family-based controls. The results strongly confirm 11 previously reported loci and provide genome-wide significant evidence for 21 additional loci, including the regions containing STAT3, JAK2, ICOSLG, CDKAL1 and ITLN1. The expanded molecular understanding of the basis of this disease offers promise for informed therapeutic development.


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 | 2007

Sequence variants in the autophagy gene IRGM and multiple other replicating loci contribute to Crohn's disease susceptibility.

Miles Parkes; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Natalie J. Prescott; Mark Tremelling; Carl A. Anderson; Sheila Fisher; Roland G. Roberts; Elaine R. Nimmo; Fraser Cummings; Dianne Soars; Hazel E. Drummond; Charlie W. Lees; Saud A Khawaja; Richard Bagnall; D. A. Burke; Ce Todhunter; Tariq Ahmad; Clive M. Onnie; Wendy L. McArdle; David P. Strachan; Graeme Bethel; Claire Bryan; Cathryn M. Lewis; Panos Deloukas; Alastair Forbes; Jeremy Sanderson; Derek P. Jewell; Jack Satsangi; John C. Mansfield; Lon R. Cardon

A genome-wide association scan in individuals with Crohns disease by the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium detected strong association at four novel loci. We tested 37 SNPs from these and other loci for association in an independent case-control sample. We obtained replication for the autophagy-inducing IRGM gene on chromosome 5q33.1 (replication P = 6.6 × 10−4, combined P = 2.1 × 10−10) and for nine other loci, including NKX2-3, PTPN2 and gene deserts on chromosomes 1q and 5p13.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Association analyses identify 38 susceptibility loci for inflammatory bowel disease and highlight shared genetic risk across populations

Jimmy Z. Liu; Suzanne van Sommeren; Hailiang Huang; Siew C. Ng; Rudi Alberts; Atsushi Takahashi; Stephan Ripke; James C. Lee; Luke Jostins; Tejas Shah; Shifteh Abedian; Jae Hee Cheon; Judy H. Cho; Naser E Daryani; Lude Franke; Yuta Fuyuno; Ailsa Hart; Ramesh C. Juyal; Garima Juyal; Won Ho Kim; Andrew P. Morris; Hossein Poustchi; William G. Newman; Vandana Midha; Timothy R. Orchard; Homayon Vahedi; Ajit Sood; Joseph J.Y. Sung; Reza Malekzadeh; Harm-Jan Westra

Ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease are the two main forms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Here we report the first trans-ancestry association study of IBD, with genome-wide or Immunochip genotype data from an extended cohort of 86,640 European individuals and Immunochip data from 9,846 individuals of East Asian, Indian or Iranian descent. We implicate 38 loci in IBD risk for the first time. For the majority of the IBD risk loci, the direction and magnitude of effect are consistent in European and non-European cohorts. Nevertheless, we observe genetic heterogeneity between divergent populations at several established risk loci driven by differences in allele frequency (NOD2) or effect size (TNFSF15 and ATG16L1) or a combination of these factors (IL23R and IRGM). Our results provide biological insights into the pathogenesis of IBD and demonstrate the usefulness of trans-ancestry association studies for mapping loci associated with complex diseases and understanding genetic architecture across diverse populations.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Genetic determinants of ulcerative colitis include the ECM1 locus and five loci implicated in Crohn's disease

Sheila Fisher; Mark Tremelling; Carl A. Anderson; Rhian Gwilliam; Suzannah Bumpstead; Natalie J. Prescott; Elaine R. Nimmo; Dunecan Massey; Carlo Berzuini; Christopher M. Johnson; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Fraser Cummings; Hazel E. Drummond; Charlie W. Lees; Clive M. Onnie; Catherine Hanson; Katarzyna Blaszczyk; Michael Inouye; Philip Ewels; Radhi Ravindrarajah; Andrew Keniry; Sarah Hunt; Martyn J. Carter; Nicholas J. Watkins; Willem H. Ouwehand; Cathryn M. Lewis; L R Cardon; Alan J. Lobo; Alastair Forbes; Jeremy Sanderson

We report results of a nonsynonymous SNP scan for ulcerative colitis and identify a previously unknown susceptibility locus at ECM1. We also show that several risk loci are common to ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease (IL23R, IL12B, HLA, NKX2-3 and MST1), whereas autophagy genes ATG16L1 and IRGM, along with NOD2 (also known as CARD15), are specific for Crohns disease. These data provide the first detailed illustration of the genetic relationship between these common inflammatory bowel diseases.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Genome-wide association study of ulcerative colitis identifies three new susceptibility loci, including the HNF4A region

Jeffrey C. Barrett; James C. Lee; Charles W. Lees; Natalie J. Prescott; Carl A. Anderson; Anne Phillips; Emma Wesley; K. Parnell; Hu Zhang; Hazel E. Drummond; Elaine R. Nimmo; Dunecan Massey; Kasia Blaszczyk; Tim Elliott; L Cotterill; Helen Dallal; Alan J. Lobo; Craig Mowat; Jeremy Sanderson; Derek P. Jewell; William G. Newman; Cathryn Edwards; Tariq Ahmad; John C. Mansfield; Jack Satsangi; Miles Parkes; Christopher G. Mathew; Peter Donnelly; Leena Peltonen; Jenefer M. Blackwell

Ulcerative colitis is a common form of inflammatory bowel disease with a complex etiology. As part of the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 2, we performed a genome-wide association scan for ulcerative colitis in 2,361 cases and 5,417 controls. Loci showing evidence of association at P < 1 × 10−5 were followed up by genotyping in an independent set of 2,321 cases and 4,818 controls. We find genome-wide significant evidence of association at three new loci, each containing at least one biologically relevant candidate gene, on chromosomes 20q13 (HNF4A; P = 3.2 × 10−17), 16q22 (CDH1 and CDH3; P = 2.8 × 10−8) and 7q31 (LAMB1; P = 3.0 × 10−8). Of note, CDH1 has recently been associated with susceptibility to colorectal cancer, an established complication of longstanding ulcerative colitis. The new associations suggest that changes in the integrity of the intestinal epithelial barrier may contribute to the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis.


Cell | 2015

Disease-Specific Alterations in the Enteric Virome in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Jason M. Norman; Scott A. Handley; Megan T. Baldridge; Lindsay Droit; Catherine Y. Liu; Brian C. Keller; Amal Kambal; Cynthia L. Monaco; Guoyan Zhao; Phillip Fleshner; Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck; Dermot P. McGovern; Ali Keshavarzian; Ece Mutlu; Jenny Sauk; Dirk Gevers; Ramnik J. Xavier; David Wang; Miles Parkes; Herbert W. Virgin

Decreases in the diversity of enteric bacterial populations are observed in patients with Crohns disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Less is known about the virome in these diseases. We show that the enteric virome is abnormal in CD and UC patients. In-depth analysis of preparations enriched for free virions in the intestine revealed that CD and UC were associated with a significant expansion of Caudovirales bacteriophages. The viromes of CD and UC patients were disease and cohort specific. Importantly, it did not appear that expansion and diversification of the enteric virome was secondary to changes in bacterial populations. These data support a model in which changes in the virome may contribute to intestinal inflammation and bacterial dysbiosis. We conclude that the virome is a candidate for contributing to, or being a biomarker for, human inflammatory bowel disease and speculate that the enteric virome may play a role in other diseases.


The Lancet | 2016

Inherited determinants of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis phenotypes: a genetic association study

Isabelle Cleynen; Gabrielle Boucher; Luke Jostins; L. Philip Schumm; Sebastian Zeissig; Tariq Ahmad; Vibeke Andersen; Jane M. Andrews; Vito Annese; Stephan Brand; Steven R. Brant; Judy H. Cho; Mark J. Daly; Marla Dubinsky; Richard H. Duerr; Lynnette R. Ferguson; Andre Franke; Richard B. Gearry; Philippe Goyette; Hakon Hakonarson; Jonas Halfvarson; Johannes R. Hov; Hailang Huang; Nicholas A. Kennedy; Ian C. Lawrance; James C. Lee; Jack Satsangi; Stephan Schreiber; Emilie Théâtre; Andrea E. van der Meulen-de Jong

Summary Background Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis are the two major forms of inflammatory bowel disease; treatment strategies have historically been determined by this binary categorisation. Genetic studies have identified 163 susceptibility loci for inflammatory bowel disease, mostly shared between Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis. We undertook the largest genotype association study, to date, in widely used clinical subphenotypes of inflammatory bowel disease with the goal of further understanding the biological relations between diseases. Methods This study included patients from 49 centres in 16 countries in Europe, North America, and Australasia. We applied the Montreal classification system of inflammatory bowel disease subphenotypes to 34 819 patients (19 713 with Crohns disease, 14 683 with ulcerative colitis) genotyped on the Immunochip array. We tested for genotype–phenotype associations across 156 154 genetic variants. We generated genetic risk scores by combining information from all known inflammatory bowel disease associations to summarise the total load of genetic risk for a particular phenotype. We used these risk scores to test the hypothesis that colonic Crohns disease, ileal Crohns disease, and ulcerative colitis are all genetically distinct from each other, and to attempt to identify patients with a mismatch between clinical diagnosis and genetic risk profile. Findings After quality control, the primary analysis included 29 838 patients (16 902 with Crohns disease, 12 597 with ulcerative colitis). Three loci (NOD2, MHC, and MST1 3p21) were associated with subphenotypes of inflammatory bowel disease, mainly disease location (essentially fixed over time; median follow-up of 10·5 years). Little or no genetic association with disease behaviour (which changed dramatically over time) remained after conditioning on disease location and age at onset. The genetic risk score representing all known risk alleles for inflammatory bowel disease showed strong association with disease subphenotype (p=1·65 × 10−78), even after exclusion of NOD2, MHC, and 3p21 (p=9·23 × 10−18). Predictive models based on the genetic risk score strongly distinguished colonic from ileal Crohns disease. Our genetic risk score could also identify a small number of patients with discrepant genetic risk profiles who were significantly more likely to have a revised diagnosis after follow-up (p=6·8 × 10−4). Interpretation Our data support a continuum of disorders within inflammatory bowel disease, much better explained by three groups (ileal Crohns disease, colonic Crohns disease, and ulcerative colitis) than by Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis as currently defined. Disease location is an intrinsic aspect of a patients disease, in part genetically determined, and the major driver to changes in disease behaviour over time. Funding International Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics Consortium members funding sources (see Acknowledgments for full list).


Gastroenterology | 2009

Investigation of Crohn's Disease Risk Loci in Ulcerative Colitis Further Defines Their Molecular Relationship

Carl A. Anderson; Dunecan Massey; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Natalie J. Prescott; Mark Tremelling; Sheila Fisher; Rhian Gwilliam; Jemima Jacob; Elaine R. Nimmo; Hazel E. Drummond; Charlie W. Lees; Clive M. Onnie; Catherine Hanson; Katarzyna Blaszczyk; Radhi Ravindrarajah; Sarah Hunt; Dhiraj Varma; Naomi Hammond; Gregory Lewis; Heather Attlesey; Nicholas A. Watkins; Willem H. Ouwehand; David P. Strachan; Wendy L. McArdle; Cathryn M. Lewis; Alan J. Lobo; Jeremy Sanderson; Derek P. Jewell; Panos Deloukas; John C. Mansfield

BACKGROUND & AIMS Identifying shared and disease-specific susceptibility loci for Crohns disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) would help define the biologic relationship between the inflammatory bowel diseases. More than 30 CD susceptibility loci have been identified. These represent important candidate susceptibility loci for UC. Loci discovered by the index genome scans in CD have previously been tested for association with UC, but those identified in the recent meta-analysis await such investigation. Furthermore, the recently identified UC locus at ECM1 requires formal testing for association with CD. METHODS We analyzed 45 single nucleotide polymorphisms, tagging 29 of the loci recently associated with CD in 2527 UC cases and 4070 population controls. We also genotyped the UC-associated ECM1 variant rs11205387 in 1560 CD patients and 3028 controls. RESULTS Nine regions showed association with UC at a threshold corrected for the 29 loci tested (P < .0017). The strongest association (P = 4.13 x 10(-8); odds ratio = 1.27) was identified with a 170-kilobase region on chromosome 1q32 that contains 3 genes. We also found association with JAK2 and replicated a recently reported association with STAT3, further implicating the role of this signaling pathway in inflammatory bowel disease. Additional novel UC susceptibility genes were LYRM4 and CDKAL1. Twenty of the loci were not associated with UC, and several appear to be specific to CD. ECM1 variation was not associated with CD. CONCLUSIONS Collectively, these data help define the genetic relationship between CD and UC and characterize common, as well as disease-specific mechanisms of pathogenesis.


Nature | 2013

Negligible impact of rare autoimmune-locus coding-region variants on missing heritability

Karen A. Hunt; Vanisha Mistry; Nicholas A. Bockett; Tariq Ahmad; Maria Ban; Jonathan Barker; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Hannah Blackburn; Oliver J. Brand; Oliver Burren; Francesca Capon; Alastair Compston; Stephen C. L. Gough; Luke Jostins; Yong Kong; James C. Lee; Monkol Lek; Daniel G. MacArthur; John C. Mansfield; Christopher G. Mathew; Charles A. Mein; Muddassar M. Mirza; Sarah Nutland; Suna Onengut-Gumuscu; Efterpi Papouli; Miles Parkes; Stephen S. Rich; Steven Sawcer; Jack Satsangi; Matthew J. Simmonds

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified common variants of modest-effect size at hundreds of loci for common autoimmune diseases; however, a substantial fraction of heritability remains unexplained, to which rare variants may contribute. To discover rare variants and test them for association with a phenotype, most studies re-sequence a small initial sample size and then genotype the discovered variants in a larger sample set. This approach fails to analyse a large fraction of the rare variants present in the entire sample set. Here we perform simultaneous amplicon-sequencing-based variant discovery and genotyping for coding exons of 25 GWAS risk genes in 41,911 UK residents of white European origin, comprising 24,892 subjects with six autoimmune disease phenotypes and 17,019 controls, and show that rare coding-region variants at known loci have a negligible role in common autoimmune disease susceptibility. These results do not support the rare-variant synthetic genome-wide-association hypothesis (in which unobserved rare causal variants lead to association detected at common tag variants). Many known autoimmune disease risk loci contain multiple, independently associated, common and low-frequency variants, and so genes at these loci are a priori stronger candidates for harbouring rare coding-region variants than other genes. Our data indicate that the missing heritability for common autoimmune diseases may not be attributable to the rare coding-region variant portion of the allelic spectrum, but perhaps, as others have proposed, may be a result of many common-variant loci of weak effect.

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James C. Lee

University of Cambridge

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Carl A. Anderson

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Jeffrey C. Barrett

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Luke Jostins

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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