- Zhao, Jian;
- Ma, Jianyang;
- Deng, Yun;
- Kelly, Jennifer A;
- Kim, Kwangwoo;
- Bang, So-Young;
- Lee, Hye-Soon;
- Li, Quan-Zhen;
- Wakeland, Edward K;
- Qiu, Rong;
- Liu, Mengru;
- Guo, Jianping;
- Li, Zhanguo;
- Tan, Wenfeng;
- Rasmussen, Astrid;
- Lessard, Christopher J;
- Sivils, Kathy L;
- Hahn, Bevra H;
- Grossman, Jennifer M;
- Kamen, Diane L;
- Gilkeson, Gary S;
- Bae, Sang-Cheol;
- Gaffney, Patrick M;
- Shen, Nan;
- Tsao, Betty P
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a heterogeneous autoimmune disease with a strong genetic component characterized by autoantibody production and a type I interferon signature. Here we report a missense variant (g.74779296G>A; p.Arg90His) in NCF1, encoding the p47phox subunit of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase (NOX2), as the putative underlying causal variant that drives a strong SLE-associated signal detected by the Immunochip in the GTF2IRD1-GTF2I region at 7q11.23 with a complex genomic structure. We show that the p.Arg90His substitution, which is reported to cause reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, predisposes to SLE (odds ratio (OR) = 3.47 in Asians (Pmeta = 3.1 × 10-104), OR = 2.61 in European Americans, OR = 2.02 in African Americans) and other autoimmune diseases, including primary Sjögren's syndrome (OR = 2.45 in Chinese, OR = 2.35 in European Americans) and rheumatoid arthritis (OR = 1.65 in Koreans). Additionally, decreased and increased copy numbers of NCF1 predispose to and protect against SLE, respectively. Our data highlight the pathogenic role of reduced NOX2-derived ROS levels in autoimmune diseases.