Skip to main content

and
  1. No Access

    Article

    Analysis of 55 autoimmune disease and type II diabetes loci: further confirmation of chromosomes 4q27, 12q13.2 and 12q24.13 as type I diabetes loci, and support for a new locus, 12q13.3–q14.1

    A candidate gene study was conducted on 10 established type II diabetes genes and 45 genes associated with autoimmune diseases, including type I diabetes (T1D), in a maximum of 1410 affected sib-pair families ...

    J D Cooper, N M Walker, B C Healy, D J Smyth, K Downes, J A Todd in Genes & Immunity (2009)

  2. No Access

    Article

    Follow-up of 1715 SNPs from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium genome-wide association study in type I diabetes families

    The advent of genome-wide association (GWA) studies has revolutionized the detection of disease loci and provided abundant evidence for previously undetected disease loci that can be pooled together in meta-an...

    J D Cooper, N M Walker, D J Smyth, K Downes, B C Healy, J A Todd in Genes & Immunity (2009)

  3. No Access

    Article

    Analysis of 19 genes for association with type I diabetes in the Type I Diabetes Genetics Consortium families

    In recent years the pace of discovery of genetic associations with type I diabetes (T1D) has accelerated, with the total number of confirmed loci, including the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region, r...

    J M M Howson, N M Walker, D J Smyth, J A Todd in Genes & Immunity (2009)

  4. No Access

    Article

    Analysis of 17 autoimmune disease-associated variants in type 1 diabetes identifies 6q23/TNFAIP3 as a susceptibility locus

    As a result of genome-wide association studies in larger sample sets, there has been an increase in identifying genes that influence susceptibility to individual immune-mediated diseases, as well as evidence t...

    E Y M G Fung, D J Smyth, J M M Howson, J D Cooper, N M Walker in Genes & Immunity (2009)

  5. Article

    Erratum: Assessing the validity of the association between the SUMO4 M55V variant and risk of type 1 diabetes

    Nat. Genet. 37, 110–111 (2005). The authors' affiliations were mistakenly omitted. A complete list of authors and their affiliations follows. Deborah J Smyth1, Joanna M M Howson1, Christopher E Lowe1, Neil M W...

    D J Smyth, J M M Howson, C E Lowe, N M Walker, A C Lam, S Nutland in Nature Genetics (2005)

  6. No Access

    Article

    Testing the possible negative association of type 1 diabetes and atopic disease by analysis of the interleukin 4 receptor gene

    Variations in the interleukin 4 receptor A (IL4RA) gene have been reported to be associated with atopy, asthma, and allergy, which may occur less frequently in subjects with type 1 diabetes (T1D). Since atopy ...

    L M Maier, R C J Twells, J M M Howson, A C Lam, D G Clayton, D J Smyth in Genes & Immunity (2003)