@article{18cc2a2bd07d457c83c7c59933797aa5,
title = "Genetic coding variant in complement factor B (CFB) is associated with increased risk for perianal Crohn's disease and leads to impaired CFB cleavage and phagocytosis",
abstract = "Objective: Perianal Crohn's disease (pCD) occurs in up to 40% of patients with CD and is associated with poor quality of life, limited treatment responses and poorly understood aetiology. We performed a genetic association study comparing CD subjects with and without perianal disease and subsequently performed functional follow-up studies for a pCD associated SNP in Complement Factor B (CFB). Design: Immunochip-based meta-analysis on 4056 pCD and 11 088 patients with CD from three independent cohorts was performed. Serological and clinical variables were analysed by regression analyses. Risk allele of rs4151651 was introduced into human CFB plasmid by site-directed mutagenesis. Binding of recombinant G252 or S252 CFB to C3b and its cleavage was determined in cell-free assays. Macrophage phagocytosis in presence of recombinant CFB or serum from CFB risk, or protective CD or healthy subjects was assessed by flow cytometry. Results: Perianal complications were associated with colonic involvement, OmpC and ASCA serology, and serology quartile sum score. We identified a genetic association for pCD (rs4151651), a non-synonymous SNP (G252S) in CFB, in all three cohorts. Recombinant S252 CFB had reduced binding to C3b, its cleavage was impaired, and complement-driven phagocytosis and cytokine secretion were reduced compared with G252 CFB. Serine 252 generates a de novo glycosylation site in CFB. Serum from homozygous risk patients displayed significantly decreased macrophage phagocytosis compared with non-risk serum. Conclusion: pCD-associated rs4151651 in CFB is a loss-of-function mutation that impairs its cleavage, activation of alternative complement pathway, and pathogen phagocytosis thus implicating the alternative complement pathway and CFB in pCD aetiology.",
keywords = "IBD - GENETICS, INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE, META-ANALYSIS",
author = "{International IBD Genetics Consortium} and Marzieh Akhlaghpour and Talin Haritunians and More, {Shyam K.} and Thomas, {Lisa S.} and Stamps, {Dalton T.} and Shishir Dube and Dalin Li and Shaohong Yang and Landers, {Carol J.} and Emebet Mengesha and Hussein Hamade and Ramachandran Murali and Potdar, {Alka A.} and Wolf, {Andrea J.} and Botwin, {Gregory J.} and Michelle Khrom and Ananthakrishnan, {Ashwin N.} and Faubion, {William A.} and Bana Jabri and Lira, {Sergio A.} and Newberry, {Rodney D.} and Sandler, {Robert S.} and Sartor, {R. Balfour} and Xavier, {Ramnik J.} and Brant, {Steven R.} and Cho, {Judy H.} and Duerr, {Richard H.} and Lazarev, {Mark G.} and Rioux, {John D.} and Schumm, {L. Philip} and Silverberg, {Mark S.} and Karen Zaghiyan and Phillip Fleshner and Melmed, {Gil Y.} and Vasiliauskas, {Eric A.} and Christina Ha and Shervin Rabizadeh and Gaurav Syal and Bonthala, {Nirupama N.} and Ziring, {David A.} and Targan, {Stephan R.} and Long, {Millie D.} and McGovern, {Dermot P.B.} and Michelsen, {Kathrin S.} and Clara Abraham and Achkar, {Jean Paul} and Tariq Ahmad and Leila Amininejad and Ananthakrishnan, {Ashwin N.} and Vibeke Andersen",
note = "Funding Information: This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Health (U01DK062413, P01 DK046763 to DM), the F. Widjaja Foundation (SRT, KSM), the Leona M. & Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust (DM) and the Fred L. Hartley Family Foundation (DM). This study was supported by the Cedars-Sinai MIRIAD IBD Biobank. The MIRIAD IBD Biobank is supported by the Widjaja Foundation Inflammatory Bowel and Immunobiology Research Institute, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease Grants P01DK046763 and U01DK062413 and The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust. We are grateful to all patients and control subjects that volunteered to join this study. The authors would like to thank the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Flow Cytometry Core. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1136/gutjnl-2023-329689",
language = "English (US)",
journal = "Gut",
issn = "0017-5749",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
}