Abstract
Background: African ancestry is associated with a higher prevalence and greater severity of asthma than European ancestries, yet genetic studies of the most common locus associated with childhood-onset asthma, 17q12–21, in African Americans have been inconclusive. The aim of this study was to leverage both the phenotyping of the Children's Respiratory and Environmental Workgroup (CREW) birth cohort consortium, and the reduced linkage disequilibrium in African Americans, to fine map the 17q12–21 locus. Methods: We first did a genetic association study and meta-analysis using 17q12–21 tag single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for childhood-onset asthma in 1613 European American and 870 African American children from the CREW consortium. Nine tag SNPs were selected based on linkage disequilibrium patterns at 17q12–21 and their association with asthma, considering the effect allele under an additive model (0, 1, or 2 effect alleles). Results were meta-analysed with publicly available summary data from the EVE consortium (on 4303 European American and 3034 African American individuals) for seven of the nine SNPs of interest. Subsequently, we tested for expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) among the SNPs associated with childhood-onset asthma and the expression of 17q12–21 genes in resting peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 85 African American CREW children and in upper airway epithelial cells from 246 African American CREW children; and in lower airway epithelial cells from 44 European American and 72 African American adults from a case-control study of asthma genetic risk in Chicago (IL, USA). Findings: 17q12–21 SNPs were broadly associated with asthma in European Americans. Only two SNPs (rs2305480 in gasdermin-B [GSDMB] and rs8076131 in ORMDL sphingolipid biosynthesis regulator 3 [ORMDL3]) were associated with asthma in African Americans, at a Bonferroni-corrected threshold of p<0·0055 (for rs2305480_G, odds ratio [OR] 1·36 [95% CI 1·12–1·65], p=0·0014; and for rs8076131_A, OR 1·37 [1·13–1·67], p=0·0010). In upper airway epithelial cells from African American children, genotype at rs2305480 was the most significant eQTL for GSDMB (eQTL effect size [β] 1·35 [95% CI 1·25–1·46], p<0·0001), and to a lesser extent showed an eQTL effect for post-GPI attachment to proteins phospholipase 3 (β 1·15 [1·08–1·22], p<0·0001). No SNPs were eQTLs for ORMDL3. By contrast, in PBMCs, the five core SNPs were associated only with expression of GSDMB and ORMDL3. Genotype at rs12936231 (in zona pellucida binding protein 2) showed the strongest associations across both genes (for GSDMB, eQTLβ 1·24 [1·15–1·32], p<0·0001; and for ORMDL3 (β 1·19 [1·12–1·24], p<0·0001). The eQTL effects of rs2305480 on GSDMB expression were replicated in lower airway cells from African American adults (β 1·29 [1·15–1·44], p<0·0001). Interpretation: Our study suggests that SNPs regulating GSDMB expression in airway epithelial cells have a major role in childhood-onset asthma, whereas SNPs regulating the expression levels of 17q12–21 genes in resting blood cells are not central to asthma risk. Our genetic and gene expression data in African Americans and European Americans indicated GSDMB to be the leading candidate gene at this important asthma locus. Funding: National Institutes of Health, Office of the Director.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 482-492 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | The Lancet Respiratory Medicine |
Volume | 8 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - May 2020 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
Funding
This work was supported by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), Office of the Director ( UG3 OD023282 , UL1 TR002373 , UM1 AI114271 , and U19 AI095230 ). Members of the Children's Respiratory Research Workgroup have also received NIH grant support: for the Childhood Asthma Study, R01 AI024156, R03 HL067427, and R01 AI051598; for the Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study, R01 ES11170 and R01 ES019890; for the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health study, P01 ES09600, R01 ES008977, P30ES09089, R01 ES013163, and EPA R827027; for the Childhood Origins of Asthma study, P01 HL070831, U10 HL064305, and R01 HL061879; for the Epidemiology of Home Allergens and Asthma Study, R01 AI035786; for the Infant Immune Study, HL56177; for the Tucson Children's Respiratory Study, R01 HL132523; for the Urban Environment and Childhood Asthma study, NO1 AI25496, NO1 AI25482, HHS N272200900052C, HHS N272201000052I, NCRR/NIH RR00052, M01 RR00533, UL1 RR025771, M01 RR00071, UL1 RR024156, UL1 TR001079, UL1 RR024992, and NCATS/NIH UL1TR000040; and for the Wayne County Health, Environment, Allergy, and Asthma Longitudinal Study, R01 AI050681, R56 AI050681, R01 AI061774, R21 AI059415, K01 AI070606, R21 AI069271, R01 HL113010, R21 ES022321, P01 AI089473, R21 AI080066, R01 AI110450, and R01 HD082147. Members of the Children's Respiratory Research Workgroup have also been supported by the Fund for Henry Ford Health System. This work was supported by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), Office of the Director (UG3 OD023282, UL1 TR002373, UM1 AI114271, and U19 AI095230). Members of the Children's Respiratory Research Workgroup have also received NIH grant support: for the Childhood Asthma Study, R01 AI024156, R03 HL067427, and R01 AI051598; for the Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study, R01 ES11170 and R01 ES019890; for the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health study, P01 ES09600, R01 ES008977, P30ES09089, R01 ES013163, and EPA R827027; for the Childhood Origins of Asthma study, P01 HL070831, U10 HL064305, and R01 HL061879; for the Epidemiology of Home Allergens and Asthma Study, R01 AI035786; for the Infant Immune Study, HL56177; for the Tucson Children's Respiratory Study, R01 HL132523; for the Urban Environment and Childhood Asthma study, NO1 AI25496, NO1 AI25482, HHS N272200900052C, HHS N272201000052I, NCRR/NIH RR00052, M01 RR00533, UL1 RR025771, M01 RR00071, UL1 RR024156, UL1 TR001079, UL1 RR024992, and NCATS/NIH UL1TR000040; and for the Wayne County Health, Environment, Allergy, and Asthma Longitudinal Study, R01 AI050681, R56 AI050681, R01 AI061774, R21 AI059415, K01 AI070606, R21 AI069271, R01 HL113010, R21 ES022321, P01 AI089473, R21 AI080066, R01 AI110450, and R01 HD082147. Members of the Children's Respiratory Research Workgroup have also been supported by the Fund for Henry Ford Health System.
Funders | Funder number |
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Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study | R01 ES11170, R01 ES019890 |
Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health | P30ES09089, EPA R827027, P01 HL070831, U10 HL064305, R01 ES013163, P01 ES09600, R01 HL061879, R01 ES008977 |
Epidemiology of Home Allergens and Asthma Study | R01 AI035786, HL56177 |
HHS N272200900052C | M01 RR00533, UL1 TR001079, UL1 RR024156, UL1 RR024992, NCRR/NIH RR00052, UL1 RR025771, M01 RR00071 |
NCATS/NIH | |
Tucson Children's Respiratory Study | NO1 AI25496, R01 HL132523, NO1 AI25482 |
US National Institutes of Health | |
Wayne County Health, Environment, Allergy | R56 AI050681, R21 AI059415, R01 HD082147, R01 HL113010, R21 AI080066, R01 AI110450, R21 ES022321, P01 AI089473, R01 AI050681, K01 AI070606, R21 AI069271, R01 AI061774 |
National Institutes of Health | |
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases | R56AI050681 |
Office of the Director | UG3 OD023282, UL1 TR002373, R03 HL067427, UM1 AI114271, R01 AI024156, U19 AI095230, R01 AI051598 |
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences | UL1TR000040 |
Henry Ford Health System |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine