- Lam, Suk Yee;
- Mommersteeg, Michiel C;
- Yu, Bingting;
- Broer, Linda;
- Spaander, Manon CW;
- Frost, Fabian;
- Weiss, Stefan;
- Völzke, Henry;
- Lerch, Markus M;
- Schöttker, Ben;
- Zhang, Yan;
- Stocker, Hannah;
- Brenner, Hermann;
- Levy, Daniel;
- Hwang, Shih-Jen;
- Wood, Alexis C;
- Rich, Stephen S;
- Rotter, Jerome I;
- Taylor, Kent D;
- Tracy, Russell P;
- Kabagambe, Edmond K;
- Leja, Marcis;
- Klovins, Janis;
- Peculis, Raitis;
- Rudzite, Dace;
- Nikitina-Zake, Liene;
- Skenders, Girts;
- Rovite, Vita;
- Uitterlinden, André;
- Kuipers, Ernst J;
- Fuhler, Gwenny M;
- Homuth, Georg;
- Peppelenbosch, Maikel P
Background & aims
A genome-wide significant association between anti-Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) IgG titers and Toll-like receptor (TLR1/6/10) locus on 4p14 was demonstrated for individuals of European ancestry, but not uniformly replicated. We re-investigated this association in an updated genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis for populations with low gastric cancer incidence, address potential causes of cohort heterogeneity, and explore functional implications of genetic variation at the TLR1/6/10 locus.Methods
The dichotomous GWAS (25% individuals exhibiting highest anti-H pylori IgG titers vs remaining 75%) included discovery and replication sampls of, respectively, n = 15,685 and n = 9676, all of European ancestry. Longitudinal analysis of serologic data was performed on H pylori-eradicated subjects (n = 132) and patients under surveillance for premalignant gastric lesions (n = 107). TLR1/6/10 surface expression, TLR1 mRNA, and cytokine levels were measured in leukocyte subsets of healthy subjects (n = 26) genotyped for TLR1/6/10 variants.Results
The association of the TLR1/6/10 locus with anti-H pylori IgG titers (rs12233670; β = -0.267 ± SE 0.034; P = 4.42 × 10-15) presented with high heterogeneity and failed replication. Anti-H pylori IgG titers declined within 2-4 years after eradication treatment (P = 0.004), and decreased over time in patients with premalignant gastric lesions (P < 0.001). Variation at the TLR1/6/10 locus affected TLR1-mediated cytokine production and TLR1 surface expression on monocytes (P = 0.016) and neutrophils (P = 0.030), but not mRNA levels.Conclusions
The association between anti-H pylori IgG titers and TLR1/6/10 locus was not replicated across cohorts, possibly owing to dependency of anti-H pylori IgG titers on therapy, clearance, and antibody decay. H pylori-mediated immune cell activation is partly mediated via TLR1 signaling, which in turn is affected by genetic variation.