London Stephanie J, Gao Wei, Gharib Sina A, Hancock Dana B, Wilk Jemma B, House John S, Gibbs Richard A, Muzny Donna M, Lumley Thomas, Franceschini Nora, North Kari E, Psaty Bruce M, Kovar Christie L, Coresh Josef, Zhou Yanhua, Heckbert Susan R, Brody Jennifer A, Morrison Alanna C, Dupuis Josée
Circ Cardiovasc Genet. 2014 Jun;7(3):350-8. doi: 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.113.000066.
The pulmonary function measures of forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and its ratio to forced vital capacity (FVC) are used in the diagnosis and monitoring of lung diseases and predict cardiovascular mortality in the general population. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified numerous loci associated with FEV1 and FEV1/FVC, but the causal variants remain uncertain. We hypothesized that novel or rare variants poorly tagged by GWASs may explain the significant associations between FEV1/FVC and 2 genes: ADAM19 and HTR4.
We sequenced ADAM19 and its promoter region along with the ≈21-kb portion of HTR4 harboring GWAS single-nucleotide polymorphisms for pulmonary function and analyzed associations with FEV1/FVC among 3983 participants of European ancestry from Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium. Meta-analysis of common variants in each region identified statistically significant associations (316 tests; P<1.58×10(-4)) with FEV1/FVC for 14 ADAM19 single-nucleotide polymorphisms and 24 HTR4 single-nucleotide polymorphisms. After conditioning on the sentinel GWASs hit in each gene (ADAM19 rs1422795, minor allele frequency=0.33 and HTR4 rs11168048, minor allele frequency=0.40], 1 single-nucleotide polymorphism remained statistically significant (ADAM19 rs13155908, minor allele frequency=0.12; P=1.56×10(-4)). Analysis of rare variants (minor allele frequency <1%) using sequence kernel association test did not identify associations with either region.
Sequencing identified 1 common variant associated with FEV1/FVC independent of the sentinel ADAM19 GWAS hit and supports the original HTR4 GWAS findings. Rare variants do not seem to underlie GWAS associations with pulmonary function for common variants in ADAM19 and HTR4.
一秒用力呼气容积(FEV1)及其与用力肺活量(FVC)的比值等肺功能指标用于肺部疾病的诊断和监测,并可预测普通人群的心血管死亡率。全基因组关联研究(GWAS)已鉴定出许多与FEV1和FEV1/FVC相关的基因座,但因果变异仍不确定。我们推测,GWAS标记不佳的新型或罕见变异可能解释FEV1/FVC与两个基因(ADAM19和HTR4)之间的显著关联。
我们对ADAM19及其启动子区域以及包含肺功能GWAS单核苷酸多态性的HTR4约21 kb部分进行了测序,并分析了来自基因组流行病学心脏与衰老研究队列(CHARGE)联盟的3983名欧洲血统参与者中与FEV1/FVC的关联。对每个区域的常见变异进行荟萃分析,发现14个ADAM19单核苷酸多态性和24个HTR4单核苷酸多态性与FEV1/FVC存在统计学显著关联(316次检验;P<1.58×10-4)。在对每个基因中GWAS的前导命中(ADAM19 rs1422795,次要等位基因频率=0.33;HTR4 rs11168048,次要等位基因频率=0.40)进行校正后,1个单核苷酸多态性仍具有统计学显著性(ADAM19 rs13155908,次要等位基因频率=0.12;P=1.56×10-4)。使用序列核关联检验对罕见变异(次要等位基因频率<1%)进行分析,未发现与任何一个区域存在关联。
测序确定了1个与FEV1/FVC相关的常见变异,该变异独立于ADAM19的GWAS前导命中,并支持最初的HTR4 GWAS研究结果。对于ADAM19和HTR4中的常见变异,罕见变异似乎并非GWAS与肺功能关联的基础。