Lal Charitharth Vivek, Ambalavanan Namasivayam
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 176F Suite 9380, Women and Infants Center, 619 South 19th St, Birmingham, AL 35249-7335.
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 176F Suite 9380, Women and Infants Center, 619 South 19th St, Birmingham, AL 35249-7335.
Semin Perinatol. 2015 Dec;39(8):584-91. doi: 10.1053/j.semperi.2015.09.004. Epub 2015 Oct 23.
The objective of this study is to review the candidate gene and genome-wide association studies relevant to bronchopulmonary dysplasia, and to discuss the emerging understanding of the complexities involved in genetic predisposition to bronchopulmonary dysplasia and its outcomes. Genetic factors contribute much of the variance in risk for BPD. Studies to date evaluating single or a few candidate genes have not been successful in yielding results that are replicated in GWAS, perhaps due to more stringent p-value thresholds. GWAS studies have identified only a single gene (SPOCK2) at genome-wide significance in a European White and African cohort, which was not replicated in two North American studies. Pathway gene-set analysis in a North American cohort confirmed involvement of known pathways of lung development and repair (e.g., CD44 and phosphorus oxygen lyase activity) and indicated novel molecules and pathways (e.g., adenosine deaminase and targets of miR-219) involved in genetic predisposition to BPD. The genetic basis of severe BPD is different from that of mild/moderate BPD, and the variants/pathways associated with BPD vary by race/ethnicity. A pilot study of whole exome sequencing identified hundreds of genes of interest, and indicated the overall feasibility as well as complexity of this approach. Better phenotyping of BPD by severity and pathophysiology, and careful analysis of race/ethnicity is required to gain a better understanding of the genetic basis of BPD. Future translational studies are required for the identification of potential genetic predispositions (rare variants and dysregulated pathways) by next-generation sequencing methods in individual infants (personalized genomics).
本研究的目的是回顾与支气管肺发育不良相关的候选基因和全基因组关联研究,并讨论对支气管肺发育不良遗传易感性及其后果所涉及的复杂性的新认识。遗传因素在支气管肺发育不良风险的变异中起很大作用。迄今为止,评估单个或少数候选基因的研究未能成功得出在全基因组关联研究中可重复的结果,这可能是由于更严格的p值阈值所致。全基因组关联研究仅在欧洲白人和非洲人群中确定了一个达到全基因组显著性的基因(SPOCK2),而在两项北美研究中未得到重复验证。北美人群中的通路基因集分析证实了已知的肺发育和修复通路(如CD44和磷氧裂解酶活性)的参与,并指出了与支气管肺发育不良遗传易感性相关的新分子和通路(如腺苷脱氨酶和miR-219的靶标)。重度支气管肺发育不良的遗传基础与轻度/中度支气管肺发育不良不同,与支气管肺发育不良相关的变异/通路因种族/民族而异。一项全外显子组测序的初步研究确定了数百个感兴趣的基因,并表明了这种方法的总体可行性和复杂性。需要通过严重程度和病理生理学对支气管肺发育不良进行更好的表型分析,并仔细分析种族/民族,以更好地了解支气管肺发育不良的遗传基础。未来需要进行转化研究,通过下一代测序方法在个体婴儿中识别潜在的遗传易感性(罕见变异和失调通路)(个性化基因组学)。