| Literature DB >> 34311721 |
Rasha N Alotaibi1,2,3, Brian J Howe4,5, Jonathan M Chernus6,7, Nandita Mukhopadhyay6,8, Carla Sanchez6,8, Frederic W B Deleyiannis9, Katherine Neiswanger6,8, Carmencita Padilla10, Fernando A Poletta11, Ieda M Orioli12, Carmen J Buxó13, Jacqueline T Hecht14, George L Wehby15, Ross E Long16, Alexandre R Vieira6, Seth M Weinberg6,8, John R Shaffer6,8,7, Lina M Moreno Uribe4,17, Mary L Marazita6,8,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dental caries is one of the most common chronic diseases and is influenced by a complex interplay of genetic and environmental factors. Most previous genetic studies of caries have focused on identifying genes that contribute to dental caries in specific ethnic groups, usually of European descent.Entities:
Keywords: Dental caries; Ethnicity; Genetics; Genomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34311721 PMCID: PMC8311973 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-021-01670-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Genome-wide studies of dental caries
| Study | Sample size | Dental caries phenotype | Genes | Genome-wide significant associations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shaffer et al. 2011 | 1305 white children, age 3–12 | Binary affection status in primary dentation | No | |
| Wang et al. 2012 | 7443 whites Adult, age 17–89 | Permanent decayed, missing, filled surfaces index (DMFS) | No | |
| Shaffer et al. 2013 | 920 whites Adult, ages 18–75 | Permanent cluster- based partial DMFS | Yes | |
| No | ||||
| Zeng et al. 2013 | 1017 whites Adult, age 14–56 | Permanent decayed and filled teeth (dft) stratified to generate df-pitt and fissures (dfPF)and df-smooth surface (dfSM) | No | |
| Zeng et al. 2014 | 1006 white children, age 3–14 | Primary decayed and filled teeth (dft) stratified to generate df-pitt and fissures (dfPF)and df-smooth surface (dfSM) | Yes | |
| No | ||||
| Haworth et al. 2018 | 19,003 Primary analysis; 13,353 Permanent analysis European ancestry meta-analysis age 2.5–18 | Presence or absence of treated or untreated caries | Yes | |
| Shungin et al. 2019 | GLIDE and UKB (n = 26,792) | DMFS, DFSS, Nteeth | Yes | |
| No |
Basic characteristics of the study cohorts
| Male, n (%) | Female, n (%) | Age, range | No cleft | With cleft | dft/DFT, range | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 619 (55.5%) | 497 (44.5%) | 2–12 6.9 ± 2.6 | 687 | 429 | 0–20 2.6 ± 3.6 | 1116 |
| 1001 (38.9%) | 1569 (61.1%) | 18–60 34.4 ± 9.9 | 2408 | 162 | 0–25 5 ± 4.3 | 2570 |
Distribution of participants across different sites
| Site | Primary | Permanent | DFT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorado | 26 | 1.42 ± 1.55 | 32 | 8.12 ± 3.87 |
| Iowa | 225 | 0.65 ± 1.48 | 358 | 3.51 ± 3.56 |
| Pittsburgh | 78 | 1.16 ± 2.54 | 147 | 7.48 ± 5.10 |
| Texas | 130 | 2.55 ± 3.21 | 196 | 4.74 ± 4.69 |
| Puerto Rico | 55 | 2.09 ± 2.80 | 121 | 8.53 ± 4.06 |
| Total | 514 (46.1%) | 1.40 + 2.47 | 854 (33.2%) | 5.36 ± 4.66 |
| Hungary | 213 | 2.31 ± 2.94 | 565 | 6.45 ± 4.48 |
| Argentina | 106 | 2.46 ± 3.09 | 246 | 4.32 ± 3.95 |
| Philippines | 159 | 6.35 ± 4.86 | 563 | 4.20 ± 3.71 |
| Guatemala | 124 | 3.76 ± 3.34 | 342 | 3.26 ± 3.67 |
| Total | 478 (53.9%) | 3.70 ± 4.00 | 1374 (66.8%) | 4.78 ± 4.19 |
| Total across all sites | 1116 | 2.6 ± 3.6 | 2570 | 5 ± 4.3 |
Regression results for the covariates
| Phenotype | Covariate | Beta | SE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Age | 1.69641 | 0.19039 | < 2e−16*** |
| Age2 | − 0.12954 | 0.01357 | < 2e−16*** | |
| Sex | − 0.10053 | 0.19735 | 0.611 | |
| Site | 2.27537 | 0.19744 | < 2e−16*** | |
| Cleft status | 0.80861 | 0.20120 | 6.24e−05*** | |
| Permanent DFT | Age | 0.3832854 | 0.0531329 | 7.14e−13*** |
| Age2 | − 0.0039532 | 0.0007238 | 5.17e−08*** | |
| Sex | 0.6350039 | 0.1723444 | 0.000234*** | |
| Site | 0.3680415 | 0.1865084 | 0.048566* | |
| Cleft status | 1.4312329 | 0.3496957 | 4.39e−05*** |
Significant P values codes: 0 ‘***’ 0.001 ‘**’ 0.01 ‘*’ 0.05
Fig. 1Manhattan plots and (Q-Q) plots showing GWAS results for the analyses. Red lines represent thresholds for genome-wide significance (p value < 5 × 10−8). Blue lines represent thresholds for suggestive significance (p value < 5 × 10−6). a Manhattan plots for primary dft show negative log10-transformed p values (y-axis) across the whole genome (x-axis). Genotyped and imputed SNPs are plotted together. b The quantile–quantile plot (Q-Q) for GWAS of Primary dft. The genomic inflation factor (λ) is 0.98. c Manhattan plots for permanent DFT show negative log10-transformed p values (y-axis) across the whole genome (x-axis). Genotyped and imputed SNPs are plotted together. d The quantile–quantile plot (Q–Q) for GWAS of permanent DFT. The genomic inflation factor (λ) is 0.99
Significant and suggestive SNPs across the analyses
| Lead SNP | Chr band | BP | Beta | Nearby Gene(s) | dbSNP Annotation | Biological Role* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs80177293 | 5q14.3 | 88,865,345 | − 2.91 | 8.23e−10 | Non-coding | Essential for post- transcriptional regulation of gene expression in different organism [Hansen, et al. 2010] | |
| rs113021760 | 9p23 | 114,805,385 | − 2.67 | 3.36e−09 | Intronic | A protein coding gene that has been associated with Venous thromboembolism (VTE), a cardiovascular disease [Tang et al. 2013] Involved in the biosynthesis of glycosphingolipid (Ichikawa, et al. 1996) | |
| rs75833698 | 6p22.3 | 19,866,520 | − 2.17 | 4.93e−08 | Non-coding | Inhibitor of DNA binding 4 has been, regulate different cellular processes [Benezra, et al. 2001] | |
| rs16948495 | 17q21.33 | 48,005,748 | − 2.15 | 5.16e−08 | Non-coding | Mutations in this gene have been associated with tricho-dento-osseous syndrome (TDO), which cause enamel hypoplasia [Y.li et al. 2015] Play a role in forebrain and craniofacial development. Mutations cause non-syndromic orofacial cleft [Wu et al. 2015] | |
| rs75459295 | 14q13.1 | 34,767,100 | − 2.26 | 6.08e−08 | Non-coding | Involved in sphingolipid biosynthesis (Han, et al. 2009) | |
| chr9:35,753,170 | 9p13.3 | 35,753,170 | − 2.27 | 1.89e−07 | Non-coding | Participates in a variety of biological processes, including regulation of pH, and can be found in gastrointestinal mucosa [Yang et al. 2017] Plays a role migration of various cell types, including fibroblasts and osteoclasts [Monkley et al. 2001, Zou et al. 2013] | |
| rs17226825 | 9p21.1 | 33,010,337 | − 1.42 | 7.47e−08 | Non-coding | Repair of DNA damage in cells [Sano et al. 2004] Regulating the duration of an inflammatory response [Yamashita et al. 2016] | |
| rs6708025 | 2p24.2 | 178,577,642 | − 3.00 | 1.36e−07 | Intronic | Messenger in different signal transduction pathways [Fawcett et al. 2000] | |
| rs11686767 | 2p16.1 | 60,990,128 | − 0.63 | 3.09e−07 | Intronic | Catalyzing template-independent extension of a DNA/RNA strand [Topalian et al. 2001] Regulate inflammation, immune response & apoptosis [Shono et al. 2014] | |
| rs288547958 | 7q35 | 145,203,344 | − 176 | 6.93e−07 | Non-coding | Role in neuronal migration, dendritic arborisation and synaptic transmission [Anderson et al. 2012] | |
| rs73753796 | 6q15 | 92,190,076 | − 2.91 | 1.079e−06 | Non-coding | Involved in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression [Ghanbari et al. 2015] | |
| rs111979811 | 7q34 | 141,658,200 | − 2.07 | 1.11e−06 | Non-coding | Linked to loci influence bitter perception. Significant association for caries risk [Wendell et al. 2010] Activate the neural response that initiate the perception of smell [Niimura, 2012] |
*Although no known role of some of the presented genes in cariogenesis and/or odontogenesis, further investigations is needed to discover if some of these genes could have possible role in dental caries and/or odontogenesis
Fig. 2LocusZoom of regions of Interest. Panels a, b and c are association results from the primary dentition GWAS, panels d and e are from the permanent dentition GWAS. a suggestive locus near DLX3 and DLX4 genes on chromosome 17. b suggestive locus near TLN1 and CA9 on chromosome 9. c suggestive locus near NFX1 gene on chromosome 9. d suggestive locus near REL gene on chromosome 2. e suggestive locus near Taste receptor genes (TAS2R38, TAS2R3, TAS2R4, TASR25) on chromosome 7. The genome build used for the recombination rate was based on 1000 Genomes November 2014 EUR data. All of the gene positions and directions of transcription are annotated on the plots