Genetics
Decoding Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Through Shared Autoimmune Signals: Fourteen New Risk Loci from a Correlation-Informed Meta-analysis03, Jan 2026
Alper Bülbül
03, Jan 2026
This post explains how researchers expanded what we know about the genetics of multiple sclerosis by combining large datasets with an approach that intentionally learns from overlap between autoimmune diseases. Instead of treating MS as an isolated trait, the study asks a practical question: if MS shares genetic roots with other autoimmune conditions, can those shared signals help us find additional MS risk variants that standard analyses miss? By integrating a large meta-analysis with polygenic risk profiling and a “proxy-phenotype” strategy centered on primary biliary cirrhosis, the authors report fourteen additional MS-associated loci and highlight immune signaling and immunometabolic pathways as plausible biological drivers—offering both new mechanistic hypotheses and a clear example of how cross-disease genetics can accelerate discovery.
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