Has there been any comment of the previous finding of SLC25A15 in women in the UK Biobank ME/CFS dataset highlighted in the Joshua Dibble thesis, a member of Chris Pontings team. I couldn't find a reference in the new paper. Would be interesting to know the p-value in this study.
The p-value for this second SNP in DecodeME is 0.98 in males, 0.83 in the full cohort.However, to support this as a true association, it is encouraging that there are two other neighbouring SNPs on chromosome 6 with p-values near the suggestive threshold for this phenotype in males: rs1013902 and rs78375762. rs1013902 has the more notable p-value (p = 2.20 × 10−6 ), but is not in LD with rs76346913 (D0 = 0.0203). However the second SNP (rs78375762, p = 6.70 × 10−6 ) is in strong linkage disequilibrium with rs76346913 (D0 = 0.912).
It's puzzling why we can't find matches between the variants in the two sets of data. i wouldn't have expected to find multiple missing data in only a couple of variants we have spot checked for comparison..Dibble found another novel association in males with the gene PDE10A, with the SNP rs76346913, which has the ID 6:165736174:C:T, but that variant doesn't seem to be one of the variants they tested.
For reference the p-value for CFS in the UK Biobank for rs78375762 is 0.26 (Male + female)The p-value for this second SNP in DecodeME is 0.98082.
I'm not sure about the one in your previous post. I would expect it to be in the BioBank. But maybe that website GeneAtlas doesn't show every variant they tested for whatever reason.It's puzzling why we can't find matches between the variants in the two sets of data. i wouldn't have expected to find multiple missing data in only a couple of variants we have spot checked for comparison..
I was surprised at the significance of pain too.was anyone else besides me surprised that 86.1% of the cohort reported "muscle pain"? many years of following ME/CFS forums, webinars, conferences led me to believe the number would be much lower. I’m not saying this number is good or bad or inaccurate, just that it surprised me.
SERPINC1 (Tier 1)
• Protein: Antithrombin-III. UniProt. GeneCards. The allele that increases the risk of ME/CFS is associated with decreasing SERPINC1 gene expression.
• Molecular function: Serine protease inhibitor in plasma that regulates the blood coagulation cascade: AT-III inhibits thrombin and matriptase-3/TMPRSS7, as well as factors IXa, Xa and XIa.
• Cellular function: Extracellular function.
• Link to disease: Mutations in SERPINC1 cause antithrombin-III deficiency, which is a strong risk factor for thrombosis. A reduction in the serum level of this protein is associated with severe cases of COVID-19. Mutated in cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST).
• Potential relevance to ME/CFS: Previously proposed role of ischaemia–reperfusion injury in chronic, relapsing diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, Long Covid, and ME/CFS (23). Reduction in SERPINC1 levels expected to increase risk of blood clots. However, the eQTL is only found in brain tissue, where it is only expressed at a low level.
BTN2A2 (Tier 1)
• Protein: Butyrophilin subfamily 2 member A2. UniProt. GeneCards. The allele that increases the risk of ME/CFS is associated with decreasing BTN2A2 gene expression.
• Molecular function: Mouse Btn2a2 inhibits T-cell activation and promotes the induction of regulatory T cells (Tregs) (31). It also promotes central tolerance to prevent autoimmune disease (32).
• Cellular function: Innate immunity, microbe-sensing.
• Link to disease: Butyrophilins confer immunity against diverse pathogenic bacteria and parasites.
• Potential relevance to ME/CFS: Stoichiometric imbalance of BTN2A and BTN3A levels could alter the ability of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells to discriminate microbial- from self-antigens, and to kill infected cells. Vγ9Vδ2 T cells can be activated by TLR3 and TLR4 ligands. TLR4 variants have been associated with Long Covid in a combinatorial genetics analysis (33).
BTN3A3 (Tier 1)
• Protein: Butyrophilin subfamily 3 member A3. UniProt. GeneCards. The allele that increases the risk of ME/CFS is associated with increased BTN3A3 expression in skin not exposed to the sun.
• Molecular function: Co-expression of BTN3A3 synergises with BTN3A1 to greatly boost the efficiency of pAg sensing (42). Confers a chaperone-like function in boosting cell surface expression of BTN3A1 (43).
• Cellular function: Innate immunity, microbe-sensing.
• Link to disease: Butyrophilins confer immunity against diverse pathogenic bacteria and parasites.
• Potential relevance to ME/CFS: Stoichiometric imbalance of BTN2A and BTN3A levels could alter the ability of Vγ9Vδ2 T cells to discriminate microbial- from self-antigens, and to kill infected cells. Vγ9Vδ2 T cells can be activated by TLR3 and TLR4 ligands. TLR4 variants have been associated with Long Covid in a combinatorial genetics analysis (33).
ZNFX1 (Tier 1)
• Protein: Zinc finger NFX1-type containing 1. UniProt. GeneCards. The allele that increases the risk of ME/CFS is associated with increased ZNFX1 expression in blood and brain tissues.
• Molecular function: An interferon-stimulated dsRNA sensor that specifically restricts the replication of RNA viruses early after infection (82). Studies are unclear whether ZNFX1 is localised to the mitochondrion.
...
Among 3,044 COVID-19 cases, ZNFX1 expression level shows a strong negative correlation with SARS-CoV-2 viral load (85).
Previously I wondered if the “Chronic pain gene“ (CA10 I think?), might actually be associated with ME not chronic pain. But since ME is commonly undiagnosed and has chronic pain for many, a lot of pwME may have ended up in a chronic pain GWAS and with large sample sizes it might show an effect.Re: chronic pain, how is this defined? What does it mean in the context of genetics results? I see there have been multiple GWAS papers on chronic pain, but it's surprising to me that people with pain of various kinds might have a common signal genetically? There are so many conditions and situations that can cause chronic pain. Sorry if this is too basic a question.
I do have pain personally but I don't know if I would describe it as in my "muscles". Worryingly I can't remember what I answered in the questionnaire. I suppose I would answer yes, but most of the pain feels like it floats around independently of my muscles.
Yes, I was thinking the same thing. I was quite taken aback at all the genetic research for "chronic pain" compared to what we have been getting research-wise. I imagine this research looked at quite different cohorts but I am not well enough to read about it right now. Maybe someone who understands better how the analysis was done re: the chronic pain comparison will clarify the situation.Previously I wondered if the “Chronic pain gene“ (CA10 I think?), might actually be associated with ME not chronic pain. But since ME is commonly undiagnosed and has chronic pain for many, a lot of pwME may have ended up in a chronic pain GWAS and with large sample sizes it might show an effect.
That's an interesting thought.Previously I wondered if the “Chronic pain gene“ (CA10 I think?), might actually be associated with ME not chronic pain. But since ME is commonly undiagnosed and has chronic pain for many, a lot of pwME may have ended up in a chronic pain GWAS and with large sample sizes it might show an effect.
How does that make sense? If these people with "the same ME/CFS as those in DecodeME" end up in chronic pain cohort then shouldn't the chronic pain study find also the other genes from DecodeME?Previously I wondered if the “Chronic pain gene“ (CA10 I think?), might actually be associated with ME not chronic pain. But since ME is commonly undiagnosed and has chronic pain for many, a lot of pwME may have ended up in a chronic pain GWAS and with large sample sizes it might show an effect.
Anecdotally I know of more than one case where a person with ME/CFS partially "recovered" from that and their illness turned into fibromyalgia with a pain presentation basically. Interestingly the one case I am thinking of in particular involves a person where pain medication eg opiates, whatever they give you at the dentist (local anaesthetic), does not work on them - apparently this is very rare and for genetic reasons? I thought that was interesting that they have so much pain and can't really get pain relief that way. (They don't work at all seemingly for them). A fairly cruel coincidence?That's an interesting thought.
Conversely, there seems to be a lot of overlap between ME and Fibro. Maybe the people who have this chronic pain gene
/have large amounts of pain with their ME symptoms - have fibro+ME.
Yes I was wondering this, because I have inter generational mixed-race, it’s recent enough for me to have had a sickle cell test but I don’t recall what I was asked about on the DecodeME.Thanks; I would be curious about this because I am a participant and one of my parents did immigrate but one did not. Presumably this means I would be included but I cannot remember what questions I answered.I don't remember the questions being asked or what I wrote.
I am not sure in general though - how long does one's family have to be here to have not "immigrated"? I don't understand this criterion. I get it about comparing similar genes but it would be good to know if I was actually included in the GWAS portion of the study and what this means for others.
Ah this is good to know
Not necessarily. As we saw in decode the effects are quite marginal. Perhaps as @VRT suggests CA10 is associated with more Fibro adjacent presentations of ME, ie. more likely to end up in chronic pain cohorts.How does that make sense? If these people with "the same ME/CFS as those in DecodeME" end up in chronic pain cohort then shouldn't the chronic pain study find also the other genes from DecodeME?
But isn't this then just the argument that is already presented? That genes related to pain can be part of different illnesses associated to pain in various ways?Not necessarily. As we saw in decode the effects are quite marginal. Perhaps as @VRT suggests CA10 is associated with more Fibro adjacent presentations of ME, ie. more likely to end up in chronic pain cohorts.
I think we shouldn’t assume ME as “one illness”, yet.