Evaluating genetic susceptibility to Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in African Americans using admixture mapping.

Journal Article (Journal Article)

The incidence of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia (SAB) is significantly higher in African American (AA) than in European-descended populations. We used admixture mapping (AM) to test the hypothesis that genomic variations with different frequencies in European and African ancestral genomes influence susceptibility to SAB in AAs. A total of 565 adult AAs (390 cases with SAB; 175 age-matched controls) were genotyped for AM analysis. A case-only admixture score and a mixed χ2(1df) score (MIX) to jointly evaluate both single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and admixture association (P<5.00e-08) were computed using MIXSCORE. In addition, a permutation scheme was implemented to derive multiplicity adjusted P-values (genome-wide 0.05 significance threshold: P<9.46e-05). After empirical multiplicity adjustment, one region on chromosome 6 (52 SNPs, P=4.56e-05) in the HLA class II region was found to exhibit a genome-wide statistically significant increase in European ancestry. This region encodes genes involved in HLA-mediated immune response and these results provide additional evidence for genetic variation influencing HLA-mediated immunity, modulating susceptibility to SAB.

Full Text

Duke Authors

Cited Authors

  • Cyr, DD; Allen, AS; Du, G-J; Ruffin, F; Adams, C; Thaden, JT; Maskarinec, SA; Souli, M; Guo, S; Dykxhoorn, DM; Scott, WK; Fowler, VG

Published Date

  • March 2017

Published In

Volume / Issue

  • 18 / 2

Start / End Page

  • 95 - 99

PubMed ID

  • 28332560

Pubmed Central ID

  • PMC5435963

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1476-5470

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/gene.2017.6

Language

  • eng

Conference Location

  • England