Schaefer Beverly A, Flanagan Jonathan M, Alvarez Ofelia A, Nelson Stephen C, Aygun Banu, Nottage Kerri A, George Alex, Roberts Carla W, Piccone Connie M, Howard Thad A, Davis Barry R, Ware Russell E
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, United States of America.
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Oct 6;11(10):e0164364. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164364. eCollection 2016.
Discovery and validation of genetic variants that influence disease severity in children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) could lead to early identification of high-risk patients, better screening strategies, and intervention with targeted and preventive therapy. We hypothesized that newly identified genetic risk factors for the general African American population could also impact laboratory biomarkers known to contribute to the clinical disease expression of SCA, including variants influencing the white blood cell count and the development of albuminuria and abnormal glomerular filtration rate. We first investigated candidate genetic polymorphisms in well-characterized SCA pediatric cohorts from three prospective NHLBI-supported clinical trials: HUSTLE, SWiTCH, and TWiTCH. We also performed whole exome sequencing to identify novel genetic variants, using both a discovery and a validation cohort. Among candidate genes, DARC rs2814778 polymorphism regulating Duffy antigen expression had a clear influence with significantly increased WBC and neutrophil counts, but did not affect the maximum tolerated dose of hydroxyurea therapy. The APOL1 G1 polymorphism, an identified risk factor for non-diabetic renal disease, was associated with albuminuria. Whole exome sequencing discovered several novel variants that maintained significance in the validation cohorts, including ZFHX4 polymorphisms affecting both the leukocyte and neutrophil counts, as well as AGGF1, CYP4B1, CUBN, TOR2A, PKD1L2, and CD163 variants affecting the glomerular filtration rate. The identification of robust, reliable, and reproducible genetic markers for disease severity in SCA remains elusive, but new genetic variants provide avenues for further validation and investigation.
发现并验证影响镰状细胞贫血(SCA)患儿疾病严重程度的基因变异,可能有助于早期识别高危患者、优化筛查策略,并采用针对性的预防治疗措施进行干预。我们推测,新发现的一般非裔美国人群的遗传风险因素,也可能影响已知与SCA临床疾病表现相关的实验室生物标志物,包括影响白细胞计数、蛋白尿发生及肾小球滤过率异常的变异。我们首先在三项由美国国立心肺血液研究所(NHLBI)支持的前瞻性临床试验(HUSTLE、SWiTCH和TWiTCH)中,对特征明确的SCA儿科队列中的候选基因多态性进行了研究。我们还使用发现队列和验证队列进行了全外显子组测序,以识别新的基因变异。在候选基因中,调节达菲抗原表达的DARC rs2814778多态性对白细胞和中性粒细胞计数有明显影响,白细胞和中性粒细胞计数显著增加,但不影响羟基脲治疗的最大耐受剂量。APOL1 G1多态性是已确定的非糖尿病肾病风险因素,与蛋白尿相关。全外显子组测序发现了几个在验证队列中仍具有显著意义的新变异,包括影响白细胞和中性粒细胞计数的ZFHX4多态性,以及影响肾小球滤过率的AGGF1、CYP4B1、CUBN、TOR2A、PKD1L2和CD163变异。虽然在SCA中确定用于疾病严重程度的强大、可靠和可重复的遗传标记仍然困难重重,但新的基因变异为进一步验证和研究提供了途径。