Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Free Radic Biol Med. 2013 Oct;63:304-12. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2013.05.016. Epub 2013 May 17.
Antioxidant enzymes play an important role in the defense against oxidative stress in the lung and in the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Sequence variation in genes encoding antioxidant enzymes may alter susceptibility to COPD by affecting longitudinal change in lung function in adults. We genotyped 384 sequence variants in 56 candidate genes in 1281 African American and 1794 European American elderly adults in the Health, Aging, and Body Composition study. Single-marker associations and gene-by-smoking interactions with rate of change in FEV₁ and FEV₁/FVC were evaluated using linear mixed-effects models, stratified by race/ethnicity. In European Americans, rs17883901 in GCLC was statistically significantly associated with rate of change in FEV₁/FVC; the recessive genotype (TT) was associated with a 0.9% per year steeper decline (P = 4.50 × 10(-5)). Statistically significant gene-by-smoking interactions were observed for variants in two genes in European Americans: the minor allele of rs2297765 in mGST3 attenuated the accelerated decline in FEV₁/FVC in smokers by 0.45% per year (P = 1.13 × 10(-4)); for participants with greater baseline smoking pack-years, the minor allele of rs2073192 in IDH3B was associated with an accelerated decline in FEV₁/FVC (P = 2.10 × 10(-4)). For both genes, nominally significant interactions (P < 0.01) were observed at the gene level in African Americans (P = 0.007 and 4.60 × 10(-4), respectively). Nominally significant evidence of association was observed for variants in SOD3 and GLRX2 in multiple analyses. This study identifies two novel genes associated with longitudinal lung function phenotypes in both African and European Americans and confirms a prior finding for GCLC. These findings suggest novel mechanisms and molecular targets for future research and advance the understanding of genetic determinants of lung function and COPD risk.
抗氧化酶在肺的氧化应激防御和慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)的发病机制中起着重要作用。编码抗氧化酶的基因序列变异可能通过影响成年人肺功能的纵向变化而改变 COPD 的易感性。我们在健康、衰老和身体成分研究中对 1281 名非裔美国人和 1794 名欧洲裔美国人老年人中的 56 个候选基因中的 384 个序列变异进行了基因分型。使用线性混合效应模型,按种族/民族分层,评估了单标记关联和基因与吸烟的相互作用与 FEV₁和 FEV₁/FVC 变化率的关系。在欧洲裔美国人中,GCLC 中的 rs17883901 与 FEV₁/FVC 变化率呈统计学显著相关;隐性基因型(TT)与每年 0.9%的更陡峭下降相关(P = 4.50×10(-5))。在欧洲裔美国人中,两个基因中的变异观察到统计学显著的基因与吸烟的相互作用:rs2297765 的次要等位基因降低了吸烟者 FEV₁/FVC 的加速下降,每年降低 0.45%(P = 1.13×10(-4));对于基线吸烟包年数较大的参与者,rs2073192 位于 IDH3B 中的次要等位基因与 FEV₁/FVC 的加速下降相关(P = 2.10×10(-4))。对于这两个基因,在非裔美国人中观察到基因水平上的名义显著相互作用(P<0.01)(分别为 P = 0.007 和 4.60×10(-4))。在多次分析中,SOD3 和 GLRX2 的变异均观察到名义显著的关联证据。本研究在非裔美国人和欧洲裔美国人中确定了两个与纵向肺功能表型相关的新基因,并证实了 GCLC 的先前发现。这些发现为未来的研究提供了新的机制和分子靶点,并增进了对肺功能和 COPD 风险的遗传决定因素的理解。