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Dive into the research topics where Zhan Su is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhan Su.


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 | 2011

Interaction between ERAP1 and HLA-B27 in ankylosing spondylitis implicates peptide handling in the mechanism for HLA-B27 in disease susceptibility

David Evans; Chris C. A. Spencer; Jennifer J. Pointon; Zhan Su; David Harvey; Grazyna Kochan; U. Oppermann; Alexander Dilthey; M. Pirinen; M Stone; L. H. Appleton; Loukas Moutsianas; Stephen Leslie; Tom Wordsworth; Tony J. Kenna; Tugce Karaderi; Gethin P. Thomas; Michael M. Ward; Michael H. Weisman; C Farrar; Linda A. Bradbury; Patrick Danoy; Robert D. Inman; Walter P. Maksymowych; Dafna D. Gladman; Proton Rahman; Ann W. Morgan; Helena Marzo-Ortega; Paul Bowness; Karl Gaffney

Ankylosing spondylitis is a common form of inflammatory arthritis predominantly affecting the spine and pelvis that occurs in approximately 5 out of 1,000 adults of European descent. Here we report the identification of three variants in the RUNX3, LTBR-TNFRSF1A and IL12B regions convincingly associated with ankylosing spondylitis (P < 5 × 10−8 in the combined discovery and replication datasets) and a further four loci at PTGER4, TBKBP1, ANTXR2 and CARD9 that show strong association across all our datasets (P < 5 × 10−6 overall, with support in each of the three datasets studied). We also show that polymorphisms of ERAP1, which encodes an endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase involved in peptide trimming before HLA class I presentation, only affect ankylosing spondylitis risk in HLA-B27–positive individuals. These findings provide strong evidence that HLA-B27 operates in ankylosing spondylitis through a mechanism involving aberrant processing of antigenic peptides.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Designing Genome-Wide Association Studies: Sample Size, Power, Imputation, and the Choice of Genotyping Chip

Chris C. A. Spencer; Zhan Su; Peter Donnelly; Jonathan Marchini

Genome-wide association studies are revolutionizing the search for the genes underlying human complex diseases. The main decisions to be made at the design stage of these studies are the choice of the commercial genotyping chip to be used and the numbers of case and control samples to be genotyped. The most common method of comparing different chips is using a measure of coverage, but this fails to properly account for the effects of sample size, the genetic model of the disease, and linkage disequilibrium between SNPs. In this paper, we argue that the statistical power to detect a causative variant should be the major criterion in study design. Because of the complicated pattern of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in the human genome, power cannot be calculated analytically and must instead be assessed by simulation. We describe in detail a method of simulating case-control samples at a set of linked SNPs that replicates the patterns of LD in human populations, and we used it to assess power for a comprehensive set of available genotyping chips. Our results allow us to compare the performance of the chips to detect variants with different effect sizes and allele frequencies, look at how power changes with sample size in different populations or when using multi-marker tags and genotype imputation approaches, and how performance compares to a hypothetical chip that contains every SNP in HapMap. A main conclusion of this study is that marked differences in genome coverage may not translate into appreciable differences in power and that, when taking budgetary considerations into account, the most powerful design may not always correspond to the chip with the highest coverage. We also show that genotype imputation can be used to boost the power of many chips up to the level obtained from a hypothetical “complete” chip containing all the SNPs in HapMap. Our results have been encapsulated into an R software package that allows users to design future association studies and our methods provide a framework with which new chip sets can be evaluated.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Genome-wide association study identifies a variant in HDAC9 associated with large vessel ischemic stroke.

Céline Bellenguez; Steve Bevan; Andreas Gschwendtner; Chris C. A. Spencer; Annette I. Burgess; M. Pirinen; Caroline Jackson; Matthew Traylor; Amy Strange; Zhan Su; Gavin Band; Paul D. Syme; Rainer Malik; Joanna Pera; Bo Norrving; Robin Lemmens; Colin Freeman; Renata Schanz; Tom James; Deborah Poole; Lee Murphy; Helen Segal; Lynelle Cortellini; Yu-Ching Cheng; Daniel Woo; Michael A. Nalls; Bertram Müller-Myhsok; Christa Meisinger; Udo Seedorf; Helen Ross-Adams

Genetic factors have been implicated in stroke risk, but few replicated associations have been reported. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for ischemic stroke and its subtypes in 3,548 affected individuals and 5,972 controls, all of European ancestry. Replication of potential signals was performed in 5,859 affected individuals and 6,281 controls. We replicated previous associations for cardioembolic stroke near PITX2 and ZFHX3 and for large vessel stroke at a 9p21 locus. We identified a new association for large vessel stroke within HDAC9 (encoding histone deacetylase 9) on chromosome 7p21.1 (including further replication in an additional 735 affected individuals and 28,583 controls) (rs11984041; combined P = 1.87 × 10−11; odds ratio (OR) = 1.42, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.28–1.57). All four loci exhibited evidence for heterogeneity of effect across the stroke subtypes, with some and possibly all affecting risk for only one subtype. This suggests distinct genetic architectures for different stroke subtypes.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Dissection of the genetics of Parkinson's disease identifies an additional association 5' of SNCA and multiple associated haplotypes at 17q21

Chris C. A. Spencer; Vincent Plagnol; Amy Strange; Michelle Gardner; C Paisan-Ruiz; Gavin Band; Roger A. Barker; Céline Bellenguez; Kailash P. Bhatia; Hannah Blackburn; Jennie M. Blackwell; Elvira Bramon; Martin A. Brown; Matthew A. Brown; David J. Burn; Juan-Pablo Casas; Patrick F. Chinnery; Carl E Clarke; Aiden Corvin; Nicholas John Craddock; Panos Deloukas; Sarah Edkins; Jonathan M. Evans; Colin Freeman; Emma Gray; John Hardy; Gavin Hudson; Sarah Hunt; Janusz Jankowski; Cordelia Langford

We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 1705 Parkinsons disease (PD) UK patients and 5175 UK controls, the largest sample size so far for a PD GWAS. Replication was attempted in an additional cohort of 1039 French PD cases and 1984 controls for the 27 regions showing the strongest evidence of association (P< 10−4). We replicated published associations in the 4q22/SNCA and 17q21/MAPT chromosome regions (P< 10−10) and found evidence for an additional independent association in 4q22/SNCA. A detailed analysis of the haplotype structure at 17q21 showed that there are three separate risk groups within this region. We found weak but consistent evidence of association for common variants located in three previously published associated regions (4p15/BST1, 4p16/GAK and 1q32/PARK16). We found no support for the previously reported SNP association in 12q12/LRRK2. We also found an association of the two SNPs in 4q22/SNCA with the age of onset of the disease.


Bioinformatics | 2011

HAPGEN2: simulation of multiple disease SNPs

Zhan Su; Jonathan Marchini; Peter Donnelly

MOTIVATION Performing experiments with simulated data is an inexpensive approach to evaluating competing experimental designs and analysis methods in genome-wide association studies. Simulation based on resampling known haplotypes is fast and efficient and can produce samples with patterns of linkage disequilibrium (LD), which mimic those in real data. However, the inability of current methods to simulate multiple nearby disease SNPs on the same chromosome can limit their application. RESULTS We introduce a new simulation algorithm based on a successful resampling method, HAPGEN, that can simulate multiple nearby disease SNPs on the same chromosome. The new method, HAPGEN2, retains many advantages of resampling methods and expands the range of disease models that current simulators offer. AVAILABILITY HAPGEN2 is freely available from http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~marchini/software/gwas/gwas.html. CONTACT [email protected] SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Common variants in the HLA-DRB1-HLA-DQA1 HLA class II region are associated with susceptibility to visceral leishmaniasis

Michaela Fakiola; Amy Strange; Heather J. Cordell; E. Nancy Miller; Matti Pirinen; Zhan Su; Anshuman Mishra; Sanjana Mehrotra; Gloria R. Monteiro; Gavin Band; Céline Bellenguez; Serge Dronov; Sarah Edkins; Colin Freeman; Eleni Giannoulatou; Emma Gray; Sarah Hunt; Henio G. Lacerda; Cordelia Langford; Richard D. Pearson; Núbia N. Pontes; Madhukar Rai; Shri P Singh; Linda Smith; Olivia Sousa; Damjan Vukcevic; Elvira Bramon; Matthew A. Brown; Juan P. Casas; Aiden Corvin

To identify susceptibility loci for visceral leishmaniasis, we undertook genome-wide association studies in two populations: 989 cases and 1,089 controls from India and 357 cases in 308 Brazilian families (1,970 individuals). The HLA-DRB1–HLA-DQA1 locus was the only region to show strong evidence of association in both populations. Replication at this region was undertaken in a second Indian population comprising 941 cases and 990 controls, and combined analysis across the three cohorts for rs9271858 at this locus showed Pcombined = 2.76 × 10−17 and odds ratio (OR) = 1.41, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.30–1.52. A conditional analysis provided evidence for multiple associations within the HLA-DRB1–HLA-DQA1 region, and a model in which risk differed between three groups of haplotypes better explained the signal and was significant in the Indian discovery and replication cohorts. In conclusion, the HLA-DRB1–HLA-DQA1 HLA class II region contributes to visceral leishmaniasis susceptibility in India and Brazil, suggesting shared genetic risk factors for visceral leishmaniasis that cross the epidemiological divides of geography and parasite species.


Nature Communications | 2014

The correlation between reading and mathematics ability at age twelve has a substantial genetic component

Oliver S. P. Davis; Gavin Band; M. Pirinen; Claire M. A. Haworth; Emma L. Meaburn; Yulia Kovas; Nicole Harlaar; Sophia J. Docherty; Ken B. Hanscombe; Maciej Trzaskowski; Charles Curtis; Amy Strange; Colin Freeman; Céline Bellenguez; Zhan Su; Richard G. Pearson; Damjan Vukcevic; Cordelia Langford; Panos Deloukas; Sarah Hunt; Emma Gray; Serge Dronov; Simon Potter; Avazeh Tashakkori-Ghanbaria; Sarah Edkins; Suzannah Bumpstead; Jenefer M. Blackwell; Elvira Bramon; Matthew A. Brown; Juan P. Casas

Dissecting how genetic and environmental influences impact on learning is helpful for maximizing numeracy and literacy. Here we show, using twin and genome-wide analysis, that there is a substantial genetic component to children’s ability in reading and mathematics, and estimate that around one half of the observed correlation in these traits is due to shared genetic effects (so-called Generalist Genes). Thus, our results highlight the potential role of the learning environment in contributing to differences in a child’s cognitive abilities at age twelve.


Biological Psychiatry | 2014

A Genome-wide Association Analysis of a Broad Psychosis Phenotype Identifies Three Loci for Further Investigation

Elvira Bramon; M. Pirinen; Amy Strange; Kuang Lin; Colin Freeman; Céline Bellenguez; Zhan Su; Gavin Band; Richard G. Pearson; Damjan Vukcevic; Cordelia Langford; Panos Deloukas; Sarah Hunt; Emma Gray; Serge Dronov; Simon Potter; Avazeh Tashakkori-Ghanbaria; Sarah Edkins; Suzannah J. Bumpstead; Maria Arranz; Steven C. Bakker; Stephan Bender; Richard Bruggeman; Wiepke Cahn; David Chandler; David A. Collier; Benedicto Crespo-Facorro; Paola Dazzan; Lieuwe de Haan; Marta Di Forti

Background Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several loci associated with schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder. We performed a GWAS of psychosis as a broad syndrome rather than within specific diagnostic categories. Methods 1239 cases with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or psychotic bipolar disorder; 857 of their unaffected relatives, and 2739 healthy controls were genotyped with the Affymetrix 6.0 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. Analyses of 695,193 SNPs were conducted using UNPHASED, which combines information across families and unrelated individuals. We attempted to replicate signals found in 23 genomic regions using existing data on nonoverlapping samples from the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium and Schizophrenia-GENE-plus cohorts (10,352 schizophrenia patients and 24,474 controls). Results No individual SNP showed compelling evidence for association with psychosis in our data. However, we observed a trend for association with same risk alleles at loci previously associated with schizophrenia (one-sided p = .003). A polygenic score analysis found that the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium’s panel of SNPs associated with schizophrenia significantly predicted disease status in our sample (p = 5 × 10–14) and explained approximately 2% of the phenotypic variance. Conclusions Although narrowly defined phenotypes have their advantages, we believe new loci may also be discovered through meta-analysis across broad phenotypes. The novel statistical methodology we introduced to model effect size heterogeneity between studies should help future GWAS that combine association evidence from related phenotypes. Applying these approaches, we highlight three loci that warrant further investigation. We found that SNPs conveying risk for schizophrenia are also predictive of disease status in our data.BACKGROUND Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several loci associated with schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder. We performed a GWAS of psychosis as a broad syndrome rather than within specific diagnostic categories. METHODS 1239 cases with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or psychotic bipolar disorder; 857 of their unaffected relatives, and 2739 healthy controls were genotyped with the Affymetrix 6.0 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. Analyses of 695,193 SNPs were conducted using UNPHASED, which combines information across families and unrelated individuals. We attempted to replicate signals found in 23 genomic regions using existing data on nonoverlapping samples from the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium and Schizophrenia-GENE-plus cohorts (10,352 schizophrenia patients and 24,474 controls). RESULTS No individual SNP showed compelling evidence for association with psychosis in our data. However, we observed a trend for association with same risk alleles at loci previously associated with schizophrenia (one-sided p = .003). A polygenic score analysis found that the Psychiatric GWAS Consortiums panel of SNPs associated with schizophrenia significantly predicted disease status in our sample (p = 5 × 10(-14)) and explained approximately 2% of the phenotypic variance. CONCLUSIONS Although narrowly defined phenotypes have their advantages, we believe new loci may also be discovered through meta-analysis across broad phenotypes. The novel statistical methodology we introduced to model effect size heterogeneity between studies should help future GWAS that combine association evidence from related phenotypes. Applying these approaches, we highlight three loci that warrant further investigation. We found that SNPs conveying risk for schizophrenia are also predictive of disease status in our data.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Genome-wide association study of intraocular pressure identifies the GLCCI1/ICA1 region as a glaucoma susceptibility locus

Amy Strange; Céline Bellenguez; Xueling Sim; Robert Luben; Pirro G. Hysi; Wishal D. Ramdas; Leonieke M. E. van Koolwijk; Colin Freeman; Matti Pirinen; Zhan Su; Gavin Band; Richard G. Pearson; Damjan Vukcevic; Cordelia Langford; Panos Deloukas; Sarah Hunt; Emma Gray; Serge Dronov; Simon Potter; Avazeh Tashakkori-Ghanbaria; Sarah Edkins; Suzannah Bumpstead; Jenefer M. Blackwell; Elvira Bramon; Matthew A. Brown; Juan P. Casas; Aiden Corvin; Audrey Duncanson; Janusz Jankowski; Hugh S. Markus

To discover quantitative trait loci for intraocular pressure, a major risk factor for glaucoma and the only modifiable one, we performed a genome-wide association study on a discovery cohort of 2175 individuals from Sydney, Australia. We found a novel association between intraocular pressure and a common variant at 7p21 near to GLCCI1 and ICA1. The findings in this region were confirmed through two UK replication cohorts totalling 4866 individuals (rs59072263, Pcombined = 1.10 × 10−8). A copy of the G allele at this SNP is associated with an increase in mean IOP of 0.45 mmHg (95%CI = 0.30–0.61 mmHg). These results lend support to the implication of vesicle trafficking and glucocorticoid inducibility pathways in the determination of intraocular pressure and in the pathogenesis of primary open-angle glaucoma.

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Colin Freeman

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Elvira Bramon

University College London

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Matthew A. Brown

Queensland University of Technology

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Panos Deloukas

Queen Mary University of London

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Chris C. A. Spencer

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Emma Gray

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Juan P. Casas

University College London

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Sarah Edkins

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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