Genetic and Environmental Factors in Autoimmune Thyroid Disease: Exploring Associations with Selenium Levels and Novel Loci in a Latvian Cohort
Sabine Upmale-Engela, Ieva Vaivode, Raitis Peculis, Helena Litvina, Tatjana Zake, Andrejs Skesters, Deniss Gogins, Vita Rovite, Ilze Konrade

TL;DR
This study explores how genetic and environmental factors, including selenium levels, are linked to autoimmune thyroid diseases in a Latvian population.
Contribution
The study identifies novel genetic loci associated with Graves’ disease, Hashimoto thyroiditis, and serum selenium levels in a Latvian cohort.
Findings
Three loci (LSAMP, HNRNPA3P5, NTN1) were associated with Graves’ disease.
One locus (VAT1L) was associated with Hashimoto thyroiditis.
A locus (LINC01544/RNF152/PIGN) was linked to high serum selenium levels.
Abstract
The interplay of genetic, immune and environmental factors strongly contributes to the development of autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD), which can be classified as Graves’ disease (GD) or Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT). One of the most studied exogenous factors in the pathogenesis of AITD is selenium, which, in the form of selenoproteins, strengthens the antioxidative defence system of thyroid cells against superoxide production. Furthermore, it modulates inflammatory cytokine release and autoantibody production. The aim of this study was to assess the associations of genetic factors with selenium levels in a cohort of adults with HT and GD and healthy controls from Latvia. A total of 148 GD patients, 102 HT patients and 2442 control participants were included in the study. The genotypes were determined using genome-wide genotyping; imputation was carried out using the TOPMed r2 imputation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotographic and Visual Arts · Architecture, Art, Education
