Background: IgA nephropathy is a major cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide. Its aetiology is poorly understood but there is good evidence for a major genetic component, although to date, no gene has been conclusively identified. We describe a new UK multicentre DNA collection assembled to investigate this. A Japanese genome-wide analysis recently reported that common genetic variation in immunoglobulin mu-binding protein 2 (IGHMBP2) was associated with IgA nephropathy. We sought to replicate this using the new UK collection, and through an independent parallel analysis of a Han Chinese population.
Methods: In the UK collection, haplotype-tagging (tag) single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and haplotypes were analysed in a case-control study (349 cases, 605 controls) and family-based analysis (162 complete and 23 partially complete family trios), which was performed using the transmission disequilibrium test. In parallel, 663 cases of IgA nephropathy and 663 controls from a Chinese population were analysed: coding and flanking regions of the gene were re-sequenced in a subset, and SNP and haplotype association analysis was performed in the whole collection using the identified tagSNPs and all the coding and exonic flanking SNPs.
Results: Case-control studies in UK and Chinese populations, and family-based tests in the UK population provided no evidence for association between variation in IGHMBP2 and IgA nephropathy. The A allele of SNP G34448A was not present in the UK collection. It was present but not associated with the disease in the Chinese population.
Conclusion: Variation in IGHMBP2 does not confer significant susceptibility to IgA nephropathy in UK Caucasian or Chinese Han populations.