• Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Dec 2017

    Whole Exome Sequencing Identify the 6q12-q16 Linkage Region and a Candidate Gene TTK for Pulmonary Nontuberculous Mycobacterial Disease.

    • Fei Chen, Eva P Szymanski, Kenneth N Olivier, Xinyue Liu, Hervé Tettelin, Steven M Holland, and Priya Duggal.
    • 1 Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
    • Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2017 Dec 15; 196 (12): 159916041599-1604.

    RationalePulmonary nontuberculous mycobacterial disease (PNTM) often affects white postmenopausal women, with a tall and lean body habitus and higher rates of scoliosis, pectus excavatum, mitral valve prolapse, and mutations in the CFTR gene. These clinical features and the familial clustering of the disease suggest an underlying genetic mechanism.ObjectivesTo map the genes associated with PNTM, whole-exome sequencing was conducted in 12 PNTM families and 57 sporadic cases recruited at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center during 2001-2013.MethodsWe performed a variant-level and a gene-level parametric linkage analysis on nine PNTM families (16 affected and 20 unaffected) as well as a gene-level association analysis on nine PNTM families and 55 sporadic cases.Measurements And Main ResultsThe genome-wide variant-level linkage analysis using 4,328 independent common variants identified a 20-cM region on chromosome 6q12-6q16 (heterogeneity logarithm of odds score = 3.9), under a recessive disease model with 100% penetrance and a risk allele frequency of 5%. All genes on chromosome 6 were then tested in the gene-level linkage analysis, using the collapsed haplotype pattern method. The TTK protein kinase gene (TTK) on chromosome 6q14.1 was the most significant (heterogeneity logarithm of odds score = 3.38). In addition, the genes MAP2K4, RCOR3, KRT83, IFNLR1, and SLC29A1 were associated with PNTM in our gene-level association analysis.ConclusionsThe TTK gene encodes a protein kinase that is essential for mitotic checkpoints and the DNA damage response. TTK and other genetic loci identified in our study may contribute to the increased susceptibility to NTM infection and its progression to pulmonary disease.

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