Celiac Disease Risk: What Your DNA Says
Nearly all celiac patients carry HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 gene variants essential for disease development.
Key Genes Behind Celiac Disease Risk
Scientists have identified specific genetic variants that influence celiac disease risk. While most traits are shaped by a combination of multiple genes and environmental factors, the following genes play particularly important roles:
HLA-DQ2HLA-DQ8Variants in genes like HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8 have been identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and replicated across multiple research populations.
How Genetics Influence Celiac Disease Risk
Your DNA contains instructions that shape celiac disease risk through variations in protein structure, enzyme activity, and gene expression levels. Small differences in your genetic code, known as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), can alter how your body develops and functions in ways that affect this trait.
For celiac disease risk, the interplay between genetic variants and environmental factors like diet, lifestyle, and exposure history determines your individual outcome. Some people carry variants that strongly push toward one expression of the trait, while others have a more balanced genetic profile where environment plays a larger role.
Genetic analysis provides insight into your predispositions, but does not guarantee a specific outcome. Traits are complex, and your unique combination of genetics and life experience shapes who you are.
How GenomeInsight Analyzes Celiac Disease Risk
GenomeInsight examines your raw DNA data from services like 23andMe, AncestryDNA, or whole-genome sequencing (VCF files) to identify genetic variants linked to celiac disease risk. All analysis runs entirely in your browser, so your genetic data never leaves your device.
For each relevant SNP, GenomeInsight reports your genotype, the trait-associated alleles, published research findings, and how your genetic profile compares to the general population. Results are presented with clear visualizations and easy-to-understand explanations.
Explore Related Traits
Lactose Intolerance
The ability to digest milk sugar (lactose) in adulthood depends on persistence of the lactase enzyme, controlled by genetics.
Caffeine Metabolism Speed
How quickly your body breaks down caffeine is determined by CYP1A2 variants, making you a fast or slow metabolizer.
Alcohol Flush Reaction
Facial flushing after drinking alcohol is caused by reduced ALDH2 enzyme activity, common in East Asian populations.
Gluten Sensitivity Risk
Variants in the HLA gene region are strongly associated with celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity.
See how your genetics relate to Celiac Disease Risk - upload your data for a personalized analysis.
Your data never leaves your browser.
Discover Your Celiac Disease Risk Profile
Upload your 23andMe, AncestryDNA, or VCF file for a free, privacy-first genetic analysis covering Celiac Disease Risk and hundreds of other traits and health conditions.
Upload Your DNA Data