| Literature DB >> 31749832 |
Frédégonde About1,2, Stéphanie Bibert3, Emmanuelle Jouanguy1,2, Bertrand Nalpas4, Lazaro Lorenzo1,2, Vimel Rattina1,2, Mohammed Zarhrate5, Sylvain Hanein2,6, Mona Munteanu7, Beat Müllhaupt8, David Semela9, Nasser Semmo10, Jean-Laurent Casanova1,2,11,12,13, Ioannis Theodorou14, Philippe Sultanik15, Thierry Poynard16,17, Stanislas Pol15, Pierre-Yves Bochud3, Aurélie Cobat1,2, Laurent Abel1,2,11.
Abstract
Despite the astonishing progress in treating chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with direct-acting antiviral agents, liver fibrosis remains a major health concern in HCV infected patients, in particular due to the treatment cost and insufficient HCV screening in many countries. Only a fraction of patients with chronic HCV infection develop liver fibrosis. While there is evidence that host genetic factors are involved in the development of liver fibrosis, the common variants identified so far, in particular by genome-wide association studies, were found to have limited effects. Here, we conducted an exome association study in 88 highly selected HCV-infected patients with and without fibrosis. A strategy focusing on TGF-β pathway genes revealed an enrichment in rare variants of the endoglin gene (ENG) in fibrosis patients. Replication studies in additional cohorts (617 patients) identified one specific ENG variant, Thr5Met, with an overall odds ratio for fibrosis development in carriers of 3.04 (1.39-6.69). Our results suggest that endoglin, a key player in TGF-β signaling, is involved in HCV-related liver fibrogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: HCV-related liver fibrosis; TGF-beta; endoglin; exome sequencing; rare-variant association study
Year: 2019 PMID: 31749832 PMCID: PMC6844190 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.01024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Clinical and demographic characteristics of chronically HCV infected patients of the discovery cohort (N = 88), the French replication cohort (N = 161), and the Swiss replication cohort (N = 453).
| Covariate | Category | Discovery cohort | French replication cohort | Swiss replication cohort | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | Total (%) | No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | Total (%) | No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | Total (%) | ||
| N = 40 | N = 48 | N = 88 | N = 102 | N = 59 | N = 161 | N = 148 | N = 308 | N = 456 | ||
| Sex | Female | 22 | 25 | 47 (53.4%) | 61 | 22 | 83 (51.5%) | 74 | 90 | 164 (36%) |
| METAVIR score | F0 | 13 | – | 13 (14.8%) | 15 | – | 15 (9.3%) | 39 | – | 39 (9%) |
| F1 | 27 | – | 27 (30.7%) | 87 | – | 87 (54.0%) | 106 | – | 106 (23%) | |
| F3 | – | 32 | 32 (36.3%) | – | 30 | 30 (18.6%) | – | 128 | 128 (28%) | |
| F4 | – | 16 | 16 (18.2%) | – | 29 | 29 (18.0%) | – | 180 | 180 (40%) | |
| Alcohol consumption (a) | Low | 40 | 42 | 82 (93.1%) | 91 | 40 | 131 (81.4%) | 65 | 126 | 191 (42%) |
| High | – | 7 | 7 (7.9%) | 11 | 19 | 30 (18.6%) | 80 | 181 | 261 (58%) | |
| HCV mode of acquisition | IDU | 9 | 16 | 25 (28.4%) | 39 | 21 | 60 (37.3%) | 54 | 101 | 155 (34%) |
| Blood transfusion | 22 | 23 | 45 (51.1%) | 41 | 29 | 70 (43.4%) | 35 | 60 | 95 (21%) | |
| Other/NA | 9 | 9 | 18 (20.5%) | 22 | 9 | 31 (19.3%) | 56 | 147 | 203 (45%) | |
| HCV genotype | 1 | 25 | 34 | 59 (67.0%) | 77 | 39 | 116 (72.0%) | 90 | 142 | 232 (51%) |
| 2 | 9 | 1 | 10 (11.4%) | 6 | 2 | 8 (5.0%) | 13 | 38 | 51 (11%) | |
| 3 | 1 | 8 | 9 (10.2%) | 13 | 12 | 25 (15.5%) | 24 | 91 | 115 (25%) | |
| 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 (3.4%) | – | – | – | 16 | 30 | 46 (10%) | |
| Other/NA | 4 | 3 | 7 (7.9%) | 6 | 6 | 12 (7.5%) | 2 | 7 | 9 (2%) | |
| Age at infection (y) (b) | Median (Q1–Q3) | 18 (11.5–23) | 29 (22–39) | 21 (17–27) | 36 (21–46) | 15 (8–18.5) | 23 (17–27.5) | |||
| Duration of infection (y) (c) | Median (Q1–Q3) | 30 (24–34.5) | 18 (14–26) | 24 (21–29) | 16 (12–19) | 32 (27–36) | 25 (18–31) | |||
(a)The threshold to define high alcohol consumption in the French cohorts and in the Swiss replication cohort were ≥30g/d and ≥40g/d, respectively. Alcohol consumption was missing in one patient with severe liver fibrosis in the Swiss replication cohort.
(b)Age at infection was missing in 77 patients with severe liver fibrosis in the Swiss replication cohort.
(c)Duration of infection was missing in 77 patients with severe liver fibrosis in the Swiss replication cohort.
Figure 1Manhattan plot for the exome association analysis of 116 informative TGF-β pathway genes in the discovery cohort. The dotted red line represents the significance threshold after Bonferroni correction (p = 0.00043).
Distribution and overall effect of ENG Thr5Met on liver fibrosis progression in the discovery cohort and the French and Swiss replication cohorts.
| Discovery | French replication | Swiss replication | All Cohorts | OR [95%CI] (a) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | No fibrosis | Severe fibrosis | |||
| N = 40 | N = 48 | N = 102 | N = 59 | N = 148 | N = 308 | N = 290 | N = 415 | |||
| N carriers(b) (%) | 0 (0) | 4 (8.3%) | 4 (3.9%) | 6 (10.2%) | 4 (2.7%) | 23 (7.5%) | 8 (2.8%) | 33 (8.0%) | 3.04 (1.39–6.69) | 0.0024 |
(a)Computed by means of the likelihood ratio test in the logistic regression framework.
(b)All carriers were heterozygous for Thr5Met.
Figure 2ENG variant Thr5Met (rs35400405) is in a regulatory region and in strong linkage disequilibrium with a potential regulatory SNP, rs45514697. The X axis for chromosome 9 positions is presented in the same direction as the transcription of ENG. (A) Eng Variant Thr5met (Rs35400405) Is in a Regulatory Region. Figure is modified from UCSC Genome Browser on Human hg19/GRCh37 Assembly (http://genome.cse.ucsc.edu). The H3K27Ac histone mark is the acetylation of lysine 27 of the H3 histone protein. It is reported as an important enhancer mark that can distinguish between active and poised enhancer elements (Creyghton et al., 2010). Schema for layered H3K27Ac shows that ENG variant Thr5Met is in an active regulatory region. Schema of DNaseI hypersensitivity clusters confirms that ENG variant Thr5Met is in a region with high transcriptional activity. Moreover, several transcription factors are found to bind to this same region. (B) Linkage Disequilibrium (Ld) Patterns of Snps Located in the Vicinity of Thr5met (Rs35400405). The Y axis shows the LD as measured by R². SNPs are indicated by circles and numbers within circles indicate the potential regulatory function of the SNP as predicted by RegulomeDB score (http://www.regulomedb.org/). ENG variant Thr5Met (rs35400405) is in almost perfect linkage disequilibrium with five non-coding SNPs (R² from 0.95 to 1). One of them, rs45514697 (R² = 0.95), is likely to affect binding (RegulomeDB score = 2b).