23 research outputs found

    Identification de facteurs génétiques modulant deux phénotypes intermédiaires de la maladie thrombo-embolique veineuse (les taux de facteurs VIII et von Willebrand)

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    La Maladie Thrombo-Embolique Veineuse (MTEV) est une maladie dont les facteurs de risque sont à la fois environnementaux et génétiques. Les facteurs de risque génétiques bien établis sont les déficits en anti-thrombine, en protéine S, en protéine C, la mutation du Facteur V de Leiden (FVL), la mutation du Facteur (F) II G20210A, ainsi que le gÚne ABO dont les allÚles A1 et B augmentent le risque de MTEV par rapport aux allÚles A2 et O. Alors qu une part importante de l héritabilité de la MTEV reste inexpliquée, les études contemporaines se heurtent à un manque de puissance pour découvrir de nouveaux facteurs génétiques dont les effets sont de plus en plus faibles. En vue d augmenter la puissance de détection de nouveaux gÚnes de susceptibilité à la MTEV, j ai recherché les déterminismes génétiques de deux de ses phénotypes intermédiaires : les taux d activité plasmatique du FVIII et les taux d antigénémie de sa protéine de transport, le Facteur de von Willebrand (vWF). Dans un premier temps, j ai réalisé une analyse de liaison des taux de FVIII et de vWF à partir d un échantillon de cinq grandes familles franco-canadiennes (totalisant 255 personnes) recrutées via un cas de MTEV avec mutation FVL. Quatre régions liées aux taux de FVIII et/ou vWF ont été identifiées. L une de ces régions correspondait au locus du gÚne ABO déjà connu pour influencer les taux de FVIII et vWF. La recherche de gÚnes candidats au sein des autres signaux de liaison s est effectuée par l étude in silico d une analyse d association pangénomique de la MTEV incluant 419 cas et 1228 témoins. Deux gÚnes candidats ont été identifiés : STAB2 et BAI3. J ai ensuite réalisé des études d associations de cinq polymorphismes de BAI3. L un d entre eux était d une part associé à une élévation des taux de vWF (résultat obtenu dans un échantillon de 108 familles nucléaires en bonne santé et reproduit dans un échantillon de 916 patients non apparentés atteints de MTEV), et d autre part associé au risque de survenue de MTEV parmi les sujets non porteurs de mutations FVL et FII de deux échantillons cas-témoins (respectivement 916 cas et 801 témoins, et 250 cas et 607 témoins). Quant à STAB2, durant le courant de ma thÚse, deux de ces polymorphismes ont été décrits comme associés aux taux de FVIII et vWF au cours d une vaste étude d association pangénomique (GWAS) menée par le consortium CHARGE rassemblant 23 600 personnes. Dans un second temps, j ai réalisé une méta-analyse de trois GWAS des taux de FVIII et vWF. Ces analyses avaient été conduites avec l échantillon des cinq grandes familles franco-canadiennes et deux échantillons de 972 et 570 patients atteints de MTEV. Elles étaient ajustées sur les polymorphismes du gÚne ABO permettant de distinguer les allÚles A1, A2, B et O, dans l optique d augmenter la puissance des analyses en diminuant la variance résiduelle des phénotypes. Aucun polymorphisme n était associé ni aux taux de vWF ni à ceux de FVIII aprÚs prise en compte de la correction de Bonferroni pour tests multiples (p<10-7). Cependant, parmi les onze gÚnes qui présentaient des polymorphismes associés aux taux de vWF ou de FVIII avec une significativité p<10-5, de maniÚre intéressante se trouvait STAB2. Cette étude a de plus permis de confirmer les associations nouvellement découvertes de polymorphismes situés dans les gÚnes VWF, STXBP5 et STX2.The Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) risk factors are environmental and genetic. The well established risk factors are anti-thrombin, protein C, protein S deficiency, Factor V Leiden and factor II mutation and ABO gene, with A1 and B allele increasing the risk of VTE. While an important part of VTE heritability remains unexplained, contemporary studies fail to discover new susceptibility genes with weaker effects. In order to increase the discovery power, I searched for genetic geterminism of two intermediary phenotypes of VTE : Factor VIII plasmatic activity (FVIII) and von Willebrand factor antigenemia (vWF)First, I performed a linkage study of FVIII and vWF from a sample of 5 large pedigrees (N=255). Four loci have been identified. One included ABO gene. I searched for candidate genes located in the others loci by studying in silico results from o Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) of the VTE including 419 cases and and 1228 controls. témoins. Two candidate genes were identified : STAB2 et BAI3. Then I performed association studies of five SNPs in BAI3 with FVIII and vWF. One of them was associated to vWF (in a sample of 108 nuclear families and 916 VTE patients), and associated to VTE in two case-controls samples (respectively 916 cases and 801 controls, and 250 cases et 607 controls).Second, I performed a meta-analysis of three GWAS of FVIII and vWF from the same 5 pedigrees and two samples of VTE (N=972 and 570) adjusted on ABO blood group. No polymorphisms were significant after Bonferoni correction (p<10-7). Nevertheless, among 11 genes carrying polymorphisms with a p<10-5, interestingly was STAB2. Futhermore, this study allowed to confirm newly discoverd association with VWF, STXBP5 et STX2.PARIS11-SCD-Bib. électronique (914719901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Genetics of venous thrombosis: insights from a new genome wide association study

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    Background: Venous Thrombosis (VT) is a common multifactorial disease associated with a major public health burden. Genetics factors are known to contribute to the susceptibility of the disease but how many genes are involved and their contribution to VT risk still remain obscure. We aimed to identify genetic variants associated with VT risk. Methodology/Principal Findings: We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) based on 551,141 SNPs genotyped in 1,542 cases and 1,110 controls. Twelve SNPs reached the genome-wide significance level of 2.0×10−8 and encompassed four known VT-associated loci, ABO, F5, F11 and FGG. By means of haplotype analyses, we also provided novel arguments in favor of a role of HIVEP1, PROCR and STAB2, three loci recently hypothesized to participate in the susceptibility to VT. However, no novel VT-associated loci came out of our GWAS. Using a recently proposed statistical methodology, we also showed that common variants could explain about 35% of the genetic variance underlying VT susceptibility among which 3% could be attributable to the main identified VT loci. This analysis additionally suggested that the common variants left to be identified are not uniformly distributed across the genome and that chromosome 20, itself, could contribute to ∌7% of the total genetic variance. Conclusions/Significance: This study might also provide a valuable source of information to expand our understanding of biological mechanisms regulating quantitative biomarkers for VT

    Combined analysis of three genome-wide association studies on vWF and FVIII plasma levels

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Elevated levels of factor VIII (FVIII) and von Willebrand Factor (vWF) are well-established risk factors for cardiovascular diseases, in particular venous thrombosis. Although high, the heritability of these traits is poorly explained by the genetic factors known so far. The aim of this work was to identify novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that could influence the variability of these traits.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Three independent genome-wide association studies for vWF plasma levels and FVIII activity were conducted and their results were combined into a meta-analysis totalling 1,624 subjects.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>No single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) reached the study-wide significance level of 1.12 × 10<sup>-7 </sup>that corresponds to the Bonferroni correction for the number of tested SNPs. Nevertheless, the recently discovered association of <it>STXBP5</it>, <it>STX2</it>, <it>TC2N </it>and <it>CLEC4M </it>genes with vWF levels and that of <it>SCARA5 </it>and STAB2 genes with FVIII levels were confirmed in this meta-analysis. Besides, among the fifteen novel SNPs showing promising association at p < 10<sup>-5 </sup>with either vWF or FVIII levels in the meta-analysis, one located in <it>ACCN1 </it>gene also showed weak association (<it>P </it>= 0.0056) with venous thrombosis in a sample of 1,946 cases and 1,228 controls.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study has generated new knowledge on genomic regions deserving further investigations in the search for genetic factors influencing vWF and FVIII plasma levels, some potentially implicated in VT, as well as providing some supporting evidence of previously identified genes.</p

    An interlaboratory study of TEX86 and BIT analysis using high-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 10 (2009): Q03012, doi:10.1029/2008GC002221.Recently, two new proxies based on the distribution of glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) were proposed, i.e., the TEX86 proxy for sea surface temperature reconstructions and the BIT index for reconstructing soil organic matter input to the ocean. In this study, fifteen laboratories participated in a round robin study of two sediment extracts with a range of TEX86 and BIT values to test the analytical reproducibility and repeatability in analyzing these proxies. For TEX86 the repeatability, indicating intra-laboratory variation, was 0.028 and 0.017 for the two sediment extracts or ±1–2°C when translated to temperature. The reproducibility, indicating among-laboratory variation, of TEX86 measurements was substantially higher, i.e., 0.050 and 0.067 or ±3–4°C when translated to temperature. The latter values are higher than those obtained in round robin studies of Mg/Ca and U37 kâ€Č paleothermometers, suggesting the need to primarily improve compatibility between labs. The repeatability of BIT measurements for the sediment with substantial amounts of soil organic matter input was relatively small, 0.029, but reproducibility was large, 0.410. This large variance could not be attributed to specific equipment used or a particular data treatment. We suggest that this may be caused by the large difference in the molecular weight in the GDGTs used in the BIT index, i.e., crenarchaeol versus the branched GDGTs. Potentially, this difference gives rise to variable responses in the different mass spectrometers used. Calibration using authentic standards is needed to establish compatibility between labs performing BIT measurements

    Association of Killer Cell Immunoglobulin-Like Receptor Genes with Hodgkin's Lymphoma in a Familial Study

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    BACKGROUND: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is the major environmental factor associated with Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL), a common lymphoma in young adults. Natural killer (NK) cells are key actors of the innate immune response against viruses. The regulation of NK cell function involves activating and inhibitory Killer cell Immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs), which are expressed in variable numbers on NK cells. Various viral and virus-related malignant disorders have been associated with the presence/absence of certain KIR genes in case/control studies. We investigated the role of the KIR cluster in HL in a family-based association study. METHODOLOGY: We included 90 families with 90 HL index cases (age 16–35 years) and 255 first-degree relatives (parents and siblings). We developed a procedure for reconstructing full genotypic information (number of gene copies) at each KIR locus from the standard KIR gene content. Out of the 90 collected families, 84 were informative and suitable for further analysis. An association study was then carried out with specific family-based analysis methods on these 84 families. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Five KIR genes in strong linkage disequilibrium were found significantly associated with HL. Refined haplotype analysis showed that the association was supported by a dominant protective effect of KIR3DS1 and/or KIR2DS1, both of which are activating receptors. The odds ratios for developing HL in subjects with at least one copy of KIR3DS1 or KIR2DS1 with respect to subjects with neither of these genes were 0.44[95% confidence interval 0.23–0.85] and 0.42[0.21–0.85], respectively. No significant association was found in a tentative replication case/control study of 68 HL cases (age 18–71 years). In the familial study, the protective effect of KIR3DS1/KIR2DS1 tended to be stronger in HL patients with detectable EBV in blood or tumour cells. CONCLUSIONS: This work defines a template for family-based association studies based on full genotypic information for the KIR cluster, and provides the first evidence that activating KIRs can have a protective role in HL

    Identification of genetic factors of two intermediary phenotypes of the venous thromboembolism : the levels of factors VIII and von Willebrand

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    La Maladie Thrombo-Embolique Veineuse (MTEV) est une maladie dont les facteurs de risque sont Ă  la fois environnementaux et gĂ©nĂ©tiques. Les facteurs de risque gĂ©nĂ©tiques bien Ă©tablis sont les dĂ©ficits en anti-thrombine, en protĂ©ine S, en protĂ©ine C, la mutation du Facteur V de Leiden (FVL), la mutation du Facteur (F) II G20210A, ainsi que le gĂšne ABO dont les allĂšles A1 et B augmentent le risque de MTEV par rapport aux allĂšles A2 et O. Alors qu’une part importante de l’hĂ©ritabilitĂ© de la MTEV reste inexpliquĂ©e, les Ă©tudes contemporaines se heurtent Ă  un manque de puissance pour dĂ©couvrir de nouveaux facteurs gĂ©nĂ©tiques dont les effets sont de plus en plus faibles. En vue d’augmenter la puissance de dĂ©tection de nouveaux gĂšnes de susceptibilitĂ© Ă  la MTEV, j’ai recherchĂ© les dĂ©terminismes gĂ©nĂ©tiques de deux de ses phĂ©notypes intermĂ©diaires : les taux d’activitĂ© plasmatique du FVIII et les taux d’antigĂ©nĂ©mie de sa protĂ©ine de transport, le Facteur de von Willebrand (vWF). Dans un premier temps, j’ai rĂ©alisĂ© une analyse de liaison des taux de FVIII et de vWF Ă  partir d’un Ă©chantillon de cinq grandes familles franco-canadiennes (totalisant 255 personnes) recrutĂ©es via un cas de MTEV avec mutation FVL. Quatre rĂ©gions liĂ©es aux taux de FVIII et/ou vWF ont Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ©es. L’une de ces rĂ©gions correspondait au locus du gĂšne ABO dĂ©jĂ  connu pour influencer les taux de FVIII et vWF. La recherche de gĂšnes candidats au sein des autres signaux de liaison s’est effectuĂ©e par l’étude in silico d’une analyse d’association pangĂ©nomique de la MTEV incluant 419 cas et 1228 tĂ©moins. Deux gĂšnes candidats ont Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ©s : STAB2 et BAI3. J’ai ensuite rĂ©alisĂ© des Ă©tudes d’associations de cinq polymorphismes de BAI3. L’un d’entre eux Ă©tait d’une part associĂ© Ă  une Ă©lĂ©vation des taux de vWF (rĂ©sultat obtenu dans un Ă©chantillon de 108 familles nuclĂ©aires en bonne santĂ© et reproduit dans un Ă©chantillon de 916 patients non apparentĂ©s atteints de MTEV), et d’autre part associĂ© au risque de survenue de MTEV parmi les sujets non porteurs de mutations FVL et FII de deux Ă©chantillons cas-tĂ©moins (respectivement 916 cas et 801 tĂ©moins, et 250 cas et 607 tĂ©moins). Quant Ă  STAB2, durant le courant de ma thĂšse, deux de ces polymorphismes ont Ă©tĂ© dĂ©crits comme associĂ©s aux taux de FVIII et vWF au cours d’une vaste Ă©tude d’association pangĂ©nomique (GWAS) menĂ©e par le consortium CHARGE rassemblant 23 600 personnes. Dans un second temps, j’ai rĂ©alisĂ© une mĂ©ta-analyse de trois GWAS des taux de FVIII et vWF. Ces analyses avaient Ă©tĂ© conduites avec l’échantillon des cinq grandes familles franco-canadiennes et deux Ă©chantillons de 972 et 570 patients atteints de MTEV. Elles Ă©taient ajustĂ©es sur les polymorphismes du gĂšne ABO permettant de distinguer les allĂšles A1, A2, B et O, dans l’optique d’augmenter la puissance des analyses en diminuant la variance rĂ©siduelle des phĂ©notypes. Aucun polymorphisme n’était associĂ© ni aux taux de vWF ni Ă  ceux de FVIII aprĂšs prise en compte de la correction de Bonferroni pour tests multiples (p<10-7). Cependant, parmi les onze gĂšnes qui prĂ©sentaient des polymorphismes associĂ©s aux taux de vWF ou de FVIII avec une significativitĂ© p<10-5, de maniĂšre intĂ©ressante se trouvait STAB2. Cette Ă©tude a de plus permis de confirmer les associations nouvellement dĂ©couvertes de polymorphismes situĂ©s dans les gĂšnes VWF, STXBP5 et STX2.The Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) risk factors are environmental and genetic. The well established risk factors are anti-thrombin, protein C, protein S deficiency, Factor V Leiden and factor II mutation and ABO gene, with A1 and B allele increasing the risk of VTE. While an important part of VTE heritability remains unexplained, contemporary studies fail to discover new susceptibility genes with weaker effects. In order to increase the discovery power, I searched for genetic geterminism of two intermediary phenotypes of VTE : Factor VIII plasmatic activity (FVIII) and von Willebrand factor antigenemia (vWF)First, I performed a linkage study of FVIII and vWF from a sample of 5 large pedigrees (N=255). Four loci have been identified. One included ABO gene. I searched for candidate genes located in the others loci by studying in silico results from o Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) of the VTE including 419 cases and and 1228 controls. tĂ©moins. Two candidate genes were identified : STAB2 et BAI3. Then I performed association studies of five SNPs in BAI3 with FVIII and vWF. One of them was associated to vWF (in a sample of 108 nuclear families and 916 VTE patients), and associated to VTE in two case-controls samples (respectively 916 cases and 801 controls, and 250 cases et 607 controls).Second, I performed a meta-analysis of three GWAS of FVIII and vWF from the same 5 pedigrees and two samples of VTE (N=972 and 570) adjusted on ABO blood group. No polymorphisms were significant after Bonferoni correction (p<10-7). Nevertheless, among 11 genes carrying polymorphisms with a p<10-5, interestingly was STAB2. Futhermore, this study allowed to confirm newly discoverd association with VWF, STXBP5 et STX2

    Epidémiologie génétique de la lÚpre (dissection d'un signal de liaison en 6p21 par une stratégie de clonage positionnel)

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    LE KREMLIN-B.- PARIS 11-BU MĂ©d (940432101) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Optimization of the pediatric head computed tomography scan image quality: reducing dose with an automatic tube potential selection in infants

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    International audiencePurposeThe objective of our study was to evaluate the impact of an automatic tube potential selection (ATPS) on the delivered dose and image quality in unenhanced head computed tomography (CT) scans of infants.Materials and methodsUnenhanced head CT scans were acquired before and after the introduction of an ATPS in full automatic mode in two groups of 20 patients under one year of age. The delivered dose (CDTIvol) as the quantitative (contrast-to-noise ratio) and qualitative (based on the European CT criteria) image quality were compared on the supra- and infratentorial regions by three senior pediatric radiologists. Mann–Whitney and Fisher exact tests were performed. An interobserver Fleiss's kappa agreement was calculated for each criterion.ResultsThe use of an ATPS allowed a significant reduction in the delivered dose (−21%, p = 0.0005) with no significant difference of the contrast-to-noise ratio in supra- (−5%, p = 0.21) and infratentorial regions (+16%, p = 0.96). In all cases, dose reduction was obtained with the same value of 100 kV. It maintained a good qualitative image quality (e.g., differentiation between gray and white matter in supra-tentorial region: p = 0.470). The interobserver Fleiss's kappa agreements were good to excellent.ConclusionATPS is a tool that can significantly reduce the delivered dose by choosing the most appropriate tube voltage while maintaining image quality in unenhanced head CT scans of infants

    Risk factors for HIV infection among men who have sex with men in the ANRS IPERGAY PrEP trial

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    International audienceObjectives We aimed to assess among men who have sex with men (MSM) risk factors for HIV infection, to identify those who require urgent pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) prescription. Methods All participants enrolled in the placebo arm of the ANRS IPERGAY trial, or infected between screening and day 0, were included. Baseline characteristics were described and HIV incidence rate ratios (RRs) were estimated with their 95% CIs. Results 203 MSM were included with a median follow-up of 9 months. During the study period, 16 participants acquired HIV infection while not receiving tenofovir disoproxil and emtricitabin (TDF/FTC) over 212.4 person-years (PYs) of follow-up (incidence rate 7.5/100 PYs, 95% CI: 4.3 to 12.2). Being enrolled in Paris was associated with a significant increased risk of HIV infection (RR: 4.1; 95% CI: 1.1 to 28.3). A high number of sexual partners in prior 2 months (≄10 vs 5 vs <5) were strong predictors for HIV acquisition (RR: 10.6 (2 to 260.2) and 3.3 (1.2 to 10.2), respectively). Those who reported more often or only receptive sexual practices were also at increased risk (RR: 9.8 (2.0 to 246.6)). The use of recreational drugs in prior 12 months, especially gamma hydroxybutarate/gamma butyrolactone (RR: 5.9; 95% CI: 2 to 21.7), was associated with a significantly increased risk of HIV acquisition even after adjustment for sexual practices. Conclusions MSM who have frequent condomless receptive anal sex and multiple partners, or use recreational drugs should be targeted in priority for PrEP prescription especially if they live in an area with a high prevalence of HIV infection
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