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Protein-truncating variants protective against human disease provide in vivo validation of therapeutic targets. Here we used targeted sequencing to conduct a search for protein-truncating variants conferring protection against inflammatory bowel disease exploiting knowledge of common variants associated with the same disease. Through replication genotyping and imputation we found that a predicted protein-truncating variant (rs36095412, p.R179X, genotyped in 11,148 ulcerative colitis patients and 295,446 controls, MAF=up to 0.78%) in RNF186, a single-exon ring finger E3 ligase with strong colonic expression, protects against ulcerative colitis (overall P=6.89 × 10(-7), odds ratio=0.30). We further demonstrate that the truncated protein exhibits reduced expression and altered subcellular localization, suggesting the protective mechanism may reside in the loss of an interaction or function via mislocalization and/or loss of an essential transmembrane domain.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/ncomms12342

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nat Commun

Publication Date

09/08/2016

Volume

7

Keywords

Alleles, Colitis, Ulcerative, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Testing, Humans, Mutation, Protein Transport, RNA, Messenger, Reproducibility of Results, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases