| Literature DB >> 33093117 |
Qi Yan1,2, Erick Forno1,2, Esther Herrera-Luis3,2, Maria Pino-Yanes3,4, Cancan Qi5,6, Raimon Rios7, Yueh-Ying Han1, Soyeon Kim1, Sam Oh8, Edna Acosta-Pérez9, Rong Zhang1, Donglei Hu8, Celeste Eng8, Scott Huntsman8, Lydiana Avila10, Nadia Boutaoui1, Michelle M Cloutier11, Manuel E Soto-Quiros10, Cheng-Jian Xu12,13, Scott T Weiss14, Jessica Lasky-Su14, Megan R Kiedrowski15, Camila Figueiredo7, Jennifer Bomberger15, Mauricio L Barreto16, Glorisa Canino9, Wei Chen1, Gerard H Koppelman5,6, Esteban G Burchard8,17, Juan C Celedón18,17.
Abstract
Severe asthma exacerbations are a major cause of school absences and healthcare costs in children, particularly those in high-risk racial/ethnic groups.To identify susceptibility genes for severe asthma exacerbations in Latino children and adolescents, we conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in 4010 Latino youth with asthma in four independent cohorts, including 1693 Puerto Ricans, 1019 Costa Ricans, 640 Mexicans, 256 Brazilians and 402 members of other Latino subgroups. We then conducted methylation quantitative trait locus, expression quantitative trait locus and expression quantitative trait methylation analyses to assess whether the top single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the meta-analysis is linked to DNA methylation and gene expression in nasal (airway) epithelium in separate cohorts of Puerto Rican and Dutch children and adolescents.In the meta-analysis of GWAS, an SNP in FLJ22447 (rs2253681) was significantly associated with 1.55 increased odds of severe asthma exacerbation (95% CI 1.34-1.79, p=6.3×10-9). This SNP was significantly associated with DNA methylation of a CpG site (cg25024579) at the FLJ22447 locus, which was in turn associated with increased expression of KCNJ2-AS1 in nasal airway epithelium from Puerto Rican children and adolescents (β=0.10, p=2.18×10-7).SNP rs2253681 was significantly associated with both DNA methylation of a cis-CpG in FLJ22447 and severe asthma exacerbations in Latino youth. This may be partly explained by changes in airway epithelial expression of a gene recently implicated in atopic asthma in Puerto Rican children and adolescents (KCNJ2-AS1).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33093117 PMCID: PMC8026735 DOI: 10.1183/13993003.02693-2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671