Eleven Grand Challenges for Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics and Genomics

Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2024 Dec 19:izae269. doi: 10.1093/ibd/izae269. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The past 2 decades have witnessed extraordinary advances in our understanding of the genetic factors influencing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), providing a foundation for the approaching era of genomic medicine. On behalf of the NIDDK IBD Genetics Consortium, we herein survey 11 grand challenges for the field as it embarks on the next 2 decades of research utilizing integrative genomic and systems biology approaches. These involve elucidation of the genetic architecture of IBD (how it compares across populations, the role of rare variants, and prospects of polygenic risk scores), in-depth cellular and molecular characterization (fine-mapping causal variants, cellular contributions to pathology, molecular pathways, interactions with environmental exposures, and advanced organoid models), and applications in personalized medicine (unmet medical needs, working toward molecular nosology, and precision therapeutics). We review recent advances in each of the 11 areas and pose challenges for the genetics and genomics communities of IBD researchers.

Keywords: IBD GWAS; genetic epidemiology; integrative genomics; personalized genomic medicine; polygenic risk scores.

Plain language summary

As members of the NIDDK Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics Consortium, we discuss 11 grand challenges for IBD genetics research related to genetic architecture, molecular and cellular biology, and translational personalized medicine, with the intention of spurring research in these areas.