
Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies African-Specific Susceptibility Loci in African Americans With Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Author(s) -
Steven R. Brant,
David T. Okou,
Claire L. Simpson,
David J. Cutler,
Talin Haritunians,
Jonathan P. Bradfield,
Pankaj Chopra,
Jarod Prince,
Ferdouse Begum,
Archana Kumar,
Chengrui Huang,
Suresh Venkateswaran,
Lisa W. Datta,
Zhi Wei,
Kelly Thomas,
Lisa J. Herrinton,
Jan-Micheal A. Klapproth,
Antonio Quiros,
Jenifer Seminerio,
Zhenqiu Liu,
Jonathan Alexander,
Robert N. Baldassano,
Sharon Dudley-Brown,
Raymond Cross,
Themistocles Dassopoulos,
Lee A. Denson,
Tanvi Dhere,
Gerald W. Dryden,
John S. Hanson,
Jason K. Hou,
Sunny Z. Hussain,
Jeffrey S. Hyams,
Kim L. Isaacs,
Howard A. Kader,
Michael Kappelman,
Jeffry Katz,
Richárd Kellermayer,
Barbara S. Kirschner,
John F. Kuemmerle,
John H. Kwon,
Mark Lazarev,
Ellen Li,
David R. Mack,
Peter Man,
Dedrick E. Moulton,
Rodney D. Newberry,
B. O. Osuntokun,
Ashish Patel,
Shehzad Ahmed Saeed,
Stephan Targan,
John F. Valentine,
MingHsi Wang,
Martin Zonca,
John D. Rioux,
Richard H. Duerr,
Mark S. Silverberg,
Judy H. Cho,
Hákon Hákonarson,
Michael E. Zwick,
Dermot McGovern,
Subra Kugathasan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
carolina digital repository (university of north carolina at chapel hill)
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.17615/qn8g-nn81
Subject(s) - inflammatory bowel disease , genome wide association study , disease , association (psychology) , genetic association , biology , medicine , genetics , single nucleotide polymorphism , genotype , gene , psychology , psychotherapist