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Dive into the research topics where Panos Deloukas is active.

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Featured researches published by Panos Deloukas.


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 | 2010

Integrating common and rare genetic variation in diverse human populations.

David Altshuler; Richard A. Gibbs; Leena Peltonen; Emmanouil T. Dermitzakis; Stephen F. Schaffner; Fuli Yu; Penelope E. Bonnen; de Bakker Pi; Panos Deloukas; Stacey Gabriel; R. Gwilliam; Sarah Hunt; Michael Inouye; Xiaoming Jia; Aarno Palotie; Melissa Parkin; Pamela Whittaker; Kyle Chang; Alicia Hawes; Lora Lewis; Yanru Ren; David A. Wheeler; Donna M. Muzny; C. Barnes; Katayoon Darvishi; Joshua M. Korn; Kristiansson K; Cin-Ty A. Lee; McCarrol Sa; James Nemesh

Despite great progress in identifying genetic variants that influence human disease, most inherited risk remains unexplained. A more complete understanding requires genome-wide studies that fully examine less common alleles in populations with a wide range of ancestry. To inform the design and interpretation of such studies, we genotyped 1.6 million common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 1,184 reference individuals from 11 global populations, and sequenced ten 100-kilobase regions in 692 of these individuals. This integrated data set of common and rare alleles, called ‘HapMap 3’, includes both SNPs and copy number polymorphisms (CNPs). We characterized population-specific differences among low-frequency variants, measured the improvement in imputation accuracy afforded by the larger reference panel, especially in imputing SNPs with a minor allele frequency of ≤5%, and demonstrated the feasibility of imputing newly discovered CNPs and SNPs. This expanded public resource of genome variants in global populations supports deeper interrogation of genomic variation and its role in human disease, and serves as a step towards a high-resolution map of the landscape of human genetic variation.


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 | 2010

A genome-wide association study identifies new psoriasis susceptibility loci and an interaction between HLA-C and ERAP1

Amy Strange; Francesca Capon; Chris C. A. Spencer; Jo Knight; Michael E. Weale; Michael H. Allen; Anne Barton; Céline Bellenguez; Judith G.M. Bergboer; Jenefer M. Blackwell; Elvira Bramon; Suzannah Bumpstead; Juan P. Casas; Michael J. Cork; Aiden Corvin; Panos Deloukas; Alexander Dilthey; Audrey Duncanson; Sarah Edkins; Xavier Estivill; Oliver FitzGerald; Colin Freeman; Emiliano Giardina; Emma Gray; Angelika Hofer; Ulrike Hüffmeier; Sarah Hunt; Alan D. Irvine; Janusz Jankowski; Brian J. Kirby

To identify new susceptibility loci for psoriasis, we undertook a genome-wide association study of 594,224 SNPs in 2,622 individuals with psoriasis and 5,667 controls. We identified associations at eight previously unreported genomic loci. Seven loci harbored genes with recognized immune functions (IL28RA, REL, IFIH1, ERAP1, TRAF3IP2, NFKBIA and TYK2). These associations were replicated in 9,079 European samples (six loci with a combined P < 5 × 10−8 and two loci with a combined P < 5 × 10−7). We also report compelling evidence for an interaction between the HLA-C and ERAP1 loci (combined P = 6.95 × 10−6). ERAP1 plays an important role in MHC class I peptide processing. ERAP1 variants only influenced psoriasis susceptibility in individuals carrying the HLA-C risk allele. Our findings implicate pathways that integrate epidermal barrier dysfunction with innate and adaptive immune dysregulation in psoriasis pathogenesis.


Nature Genetics | 2006

A high-resolution HLA and SNP haplotype map for disease association studies in the extended human MHC

Paul I. W. de Bakker; Gil McVean; Pardis C. Sabeti; Marcos M Miretti; Todd Green; Jonathan Marchini; Xiayi Ke; Alienke J. Monsuur; Pamela Whittaker; Marcos Delgado; Jonathan Morrison; Angela Richardson; Emily Walsh; Xiaojiang Gao; Luana Galver; John Hart; David A. Hafler; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; John A. Todd; Mark J. Daly; John Trowsdale; Cisca Wijmenga; Tim J Vyse; Stephan Beck; Sarah S. Murray; Mary Carrington; Simon G. Gregory; Panos Deloukas; John D. Rioux

The proteins encoded by the classical HLA class I and class II genes in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are highly polymorphic and are essential in self versus non-self immune recognition. HLA variation is a crucial determinant of transplant rejection and susceptibility to a large number of infectious and autoimmune diseases. Yet identification of causal variants is problematic owing to linkage disequilibrium that extends across multiple HLA and non-HLA genes in the MHC. We therefore set out to characterize the linkage disequilibrium patterns between the highly polymorphic HLA genes and background variation by typing the classical HLA genes and >7,500 common SNPs and deletion-insertion polymorphisms across four population samples. The analysis provides informative tag SNPs that capture much of the common variation in the MHC region and that could be used in disease association studies, and it provides new insight into the evolutionary dynamics and ancestral origins of the HLA loci and their haplotypes.


Nature | 2011

Human metabolic individuality in biomedical and pharmaceutical research

Karsten Suhre; So-Youn Shin; Ann-Kristin Petersen; Robert P. Mohney; David Meredith; Brigitte Wägele; Elisabeth Altmaier; Panos Deloukas; Jeanette Erdmann; Elin Grundberg; Christopher J. Hammond; Martin Hrabé de Angelis; Gabi Kastenmüller; Anna Köttgen; Florian Kronenberg; Massimo Mangino; Christa Meisinger; Thomas Meitinger; Hans-Werner Mewes; Michael V. Milburn; Cornelia Prehn; Johannes Raffler; Janina S. Ried; Werner Römisch-Margl; Nilesh J. Samani; Kerrin S. Small; H.-Erich Wichmann; Guangju Zhai; Thomas Illig; Tim D. Spector

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many risk loci for complex diseases, but effect sizes are typically small and information on the underlying biological processes is often lacking. Associations with metabolic traits as functional intermediates can overcome these problems and potentially inform individualized therapy. Here we report a comprehensive analysis of genotype-dependent metabolic phenotypes using a GWAS with non-targeted metabolomics. We identified 37 genetic loci associated with blood metabolite concentrations, of which 25 show effect sizes that are unusually high for GWAS and account for 10–60% differences in metabolite levels per allele copy. Our associations provide new functional insights for many disease-related associations that have been reported in previous studies, including those for cardiovascular and kidney disorders, type 2 diabetes, cancer, gout, venous thromboembolism and Crohn’s disease. The study advances our knowledge of the genetic basis of metabolic individuality in humans and generates many new hypotheses for biomedical and pharmaceutical research.


Science | 2009

Common regulatory variation impacts gene expression in a cell type dependent manner

Antigone S. Dimas; Samuel Deutsch; Barbara E. Stranger; Stephen B. Montgomery; Christelle Borel; Homa Attar-Cohen; Catherine E. Ingle; Claude Beazley; Maria Gutierrez Arcelus; Magdalena Sekowska; Marilyne Gagnebin; James Nisbett; Panos Deloukas; Emmanouil T. Dermitzakis

Tissue-Specific Control The effect of genetic variation on gene expression and phenotype among individuals is largely unknown. Dimas et al. (p. 1246, published online 30 July 2009) show that in humans there are several genes whose allelic expression varies in a tissue-specific manner and are apparently controlled by cis elements. Up to 80% of variants seem to have tissue-specific functions when compared in fibroblasts, as well as B cells and T cells. This variation among regulatory variants correlated with transcript complexity, which suggests that some of the observed regulatory variation is due to genotype-specific use of transcripts and transcription start sites. Genetic variation in regulatory elements among humans affects gene expression in a tissue-specific manner. Studies correlating genetic variation to gene expression facilitate the interpretation of common human phenotypes and disease. As functional variants may be operating in a tissue-dependent manner, we performed gene expression profiling and association with genetic variants (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) on three cell types of 75 individuals. We detected cell type–specific genetic effects, with 69 to 80% of regulatory variants operating in a cell type–specific manner, and identified multiple expressive quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) per gene, unique or shared among cell types and positively correlated with the number of transcripts per gene. Cell type–specific eQTLs were found at larger distances from genes and at lower effect size, similar to known enhancers. These data suggest that the complete regulatory variant repertoire can only be uncovered in the context of cell-type specificity.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

HLA-A*3101 and Carbamazepine-Induced Hypersensitivity Reactions in Europeans

Mark McCormack; Ana Alfirevic; Stephane Bourgeois; John J. Farrell; Dalia Kasperavičiūtė; Mary Carrington; Graeme J. Sills; Tony Marson; Xiaoming Jia; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Krishna Chinthapalli; Mariam Molokhia; Michael R. Johnson; Gerard O'Connor; Elijah Chaila; Saud Alhusaini; Rodney A. Radtke; Erin L. Heinzen; Nicole M. Walley; Massimo Pandolfo; Werner J. Pichler; B. Kevin Park; Chantal Depondt; Sanjay M. Sisodiya; David B. Goldstein; Panos Deloukas; Norman Delanty; Gianpiero L. Cavalleri; Munir Pirmohamed

BACKGROUND Carbamazepine causes various forms of hypersensitivity reactions, ranging from maculopapular exanthema to severe blistering reactions. The HLA-B*1502 allele has been shown to be strongly correlated with carbamazepine-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS-TEN) in the Han Chinese and other Asian populations but not in European populations. METHODS We performed a genomewide association study of samples obtained from 22 subjects with carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity syndrome, 43 subjects with carbamazepine-induced maculopapular exanthema, and 3987 control subjects, all of European descent. We tested for an association between disease and HLA alleles through proxy single-nucleotide polymorphisms and imputation, confirming associations by high-resolution sequence-based HLA typing. We replicated the associations in samples from 145 subjects with carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity reactions. RESULTS The HLA-A*3101 allele, which has a prevalence of 2 to 5% in Northern European populations, was significantly associated with the hypersensitivity syndrome (P=3.5×10(-8)). An independent genomewide association study of samples from subjects with maculopapular exanthema also showed an association with the HLA-A*3101 allele (P=1.1×10(-6)). Follow-up genotyping confirmed the variant as a risk factor for the hypersensitivity syndrome (odds ratio, 12.41; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.27 to 121.03), maculopapular exanthema (odds ratio, 8.33; 95% CI, 3.59 to 19.36), and SJS-TEN (odds ratio, 25.93; 95% CI, 4.93 to 116.18). CONCLUSIONS The presence of the HLA-A*3101 allele was associated with carbamazepine-induced hypersensitivity reactions among subjects of Northern European ancestry. The presence of the allele increased the risk from 5.0% to 26.0%, whereas its absence reduced the risk from 5.0% to 3.8%. (Funded by the U.K. Department of Health and others.).


The Lancet | 2008

Bone mineral density, osteoporosis, and osteoporotic fractures: a genome-wide association study

J.B. Richards; Fernando Rivadeneira; Michael Inouye; Tomi Pastinen; Nicole Soranzo; Scott G. Wilson; Toby Andrew; Mario Falchi; R. Gwilliam; Kourosh R. Ahmadi; Ana M. Valdes; P. Arp; Pamela Whittaker; Dominique J. Verlaan; Mila Jhamai; Vasudev Kumanduri; M. Moorhouse; J.B. van Meurs; Albert Hofman; Huibert A. P. Pols; Deborah J. Hart; Guangju Zhai; Bernet Kato; B.H. Mullin; Feng Zhang; Panos Deloukas; A.G. Uitterlinden; Tim D. Spector

Summary Background Osteoporosis is diagnosed by the measurement of bone mineral density, which is a highly heritable and multifactorial trait. We aimed to identify genetic loci that are associated with bone mineral density. Methods In this genome-wide association study, we identified the most promising of 314 075 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 2094 women in a UK study. We then tested these SNPs for replication in 6463 people from three other cohorts in western Europe. We also investigated allelic expression in lymphoblast cell lines. We tested the association between the replicated SNPs and osteoporotic fractures with data from two studies. Findings We identified genome-wide evidence for an association between bone mineral density and two SNPs (p<5×10−8). The SNPs were rs4355801, on chromosome 8, near to the TNFRSF11B (osteoprotegerin) gene, and rs3736228, on chromosome 11 in the LRP5 (lipoprotein-receptor-related protein) gene. A non-synonymous SNP in the LRP5 gene was associated with decreased bone mineral density (rs3736228, p=6·3×10−12 for lumbar spine and p=1·9×10−4 for femoral neck) and an increased risk of both osteoporotic fractures (odds ratio [OR] 1·3, 95% CI 1·09–1·52, p=0·002) and osteoporosis (OR 1·3, 1·08–1·63, p=0·008). Three SNPs near the TNFRSF11B gene were associated with decreased bone mineral density (top SNP, rs4355801: p=7·6×10−10 for lumbar spine and p=3·3×10−8 for femoral neck) and increased risk of osteoporosis (OR 1·2, 95% CI 1·01–1·42, p=0·038). For carriers of the risk allele at rs4355801, expression of TNFRSF11B in lymphoblast cell lines was halved (p=3·0×10−6). 1883 (22%) of 8557 people were at least heterozygous for these risk alleles, and these alleles had a cumulative association with bone mineral density (trend p=2·3×10−17). The presence of both risk alleles increased the risk of osteoporotic fractures (OR 1·3, 1·08–1·63, p=0·006) and this effect was independent of bone mineral density. Interpretation Two gene variants of key biological proteins increase the risk of osteoporosis and osteoporotic fracture. The combined effect of these risk alleles on fractures is similar to that of most well-replicated environmental risk factors, and they are present in more than one in five white people, suggesting a potential role in screening. Funding Wellcome Trust, European Commission, NWO Investments, Arthritis Research Campaign, Chronic Disease Research Foundation, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Genome Canada, Genome Quebéc, Canada Research Chairs, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, and European Union.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Newly identified genetic risk variants for celiac disease related to the immune response

Karen A. Hunt; Alexandra Zhernakova; Graham Turner; Graham A. Heap; Lude Franke; Marcel Bruinenberg; Jihane Romanos; Lotte C. Dinesen; Anthony W. Ryan; Davinder Panesar; Rhian Gwilliam; Fumihiko Takeuchi; William M. McLaren; Geoffrey Holmes; Peter D. Howdle; Julian R. Walters; David S. Sanders; Raymond J. Playford; Gosia Trynka; Chris Jj Mulder; M. Luisa Mearin; Wieke H. Verbeek; Valerie Trimble; Fiona M. Stevens; Colm O'Morain; N. P. Kennedy; Dermot Kelleher; Daniel J. Pennington; David P. Strachan; Wendy L. McArdle

Our genome-wide association study of celiac disease previously identified risk variants in the IL2–IL21 region. To identify additional risk variants, we genotyped 1,020 of the most strongly associated non-HLA markers in an additional 1,643 cases and 3,406 controls. Through joint analysis including the genome-wide association study data (767 cases, 1,422 controls), we identified seven previously unknown risk regions (P < 5 × 10−7). Six regions harbor genes controlling immune responses, including CCR3, IL12A, IL18RAP, RGS1, SH2B3 (nsSNP rs3184504) and TAGAP. Whole-blood IL18RAP mRNA expression correlated with IL18RAP genotype. Type 1 diabetes and celiac disease share HLA-DQ, IL2–IL21, CCR3 and SH2B3 risk regions. Thus, this extensive genome-wide association follow-up study has identified additional celiac disease risk variants in relevant biological pathways.

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Sarah Hunt

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Nicole Soranzo

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Rhian Gwilliam

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Stavroula Kanoni

Queen Mary University of London

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Suzannah Bumpstead

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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