posted on 2025-07-31, 23:35authored byC Schafmayer, JW Harrison, S Buch, C Lange, MC Reichert, P Hofer, F Cossais, J Kupcinskas, W von Schönfels, B Schniewind, W Kruis, J Tepel, M Zobel, J Rosendahl, T Jacobi, A Walther-Berends, M Schroeder, I Vogel, P Sergeev, H Boedeker, H Hinrichsen, A Volk, J-U Erk, G Burmeister, A Hendricks, S Hinz, S Wolff, M Böttner, AR Wood, J Tyrrell, RN Beaumont, M Langheinrich, T Kucharzik, S Brezina, U Huber-Schönauer, L Pietsch, LS Noack, M Brosch, A Herrmann, RV Thangapandi, HW Schimming, S Zeissig, S Palm, G Focke, A Andreasson, PT Schmidt, J Weitz, M Krawczak, H Völzke, G Leeb, P Michl, W Lieb, R Grützmann, A Franke, F Lammert, T Becker, L Kupcinskas, M D'Amato, T Wedel, C Datz, A Gsur, MN Weedon, J Hampe
OBJECTIVE: Diverticular disease is a common complex disorder characterised by mucosal outpouchings of the colonic wall that manifests through complications such as diverticulitis, perforation and bleeding. We report the to date largest genome-wide association study (GWAS) to identify genetic risk factors for diverticular disease. DESIGN: Discovery GWAS analysis was performed on UK Biobank imputed genotypes using 31 964 cases and 419 135 controls of European descent. Associations were replicated in a European sample of 3893 cases and 2829 diverticula-free controls and evaluated for risk contribution to diverticulitis and uncomplicated diverticulosis. Transcripts at top 20 replicating loci were analysed by real-time quatitative PCR in preparations of the mucosal, submucosal and muscular layer of colon. The localisation of expressed protein at selected loci was investigated by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: We discovered 48 risk loci, of which 12 are novel, with genome-wide significance and consistent OR in the replication sample. Nominal replication (p<0.05) was observed for 27 loci, and additional 8 in meta-analysis with a population-based cohort. The most significant novel risk variant rs9960286 is located near CTAGE1 with a p value of 2.3×10-10 and 0.002 (ORallelic=1.14 (95% CI 1.05 to 1.24)) in the replication analysis. Four loci showed stronger effects for diverticulitis, PHGR1 (OR 1.32, 95% CI 1.12 to 1.56), FAM155A-2 (OR 1.21, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.42), CALCB (OR 1.17, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.33) and S100A10 (OR 1.17, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.33). CONCLUSION: In silico analyses point to diverticulosis primarily as a disorder of intestinal neuromuscular function and of impaired connective fibre support, while an additional diverticulitis risk might be conferred by epithelial dysfunction.