Literature DB >> 34634361

Mendelian randomization to assess causality between uromodulin, blood pressure and chronic kidney disease.

Belen Ponte1, Marie C Sadler2, Eric Olinger3, Peter Vollenweider4, Murielle Bochud5, Sandosh Padmanabhan6, Caroline Hayward7, Zoltán Kutalik2, Olivier Devuyst8.   

Abstract

UMOD variants associated with higher levels of urinary uromodulin (uUMOD) increase the risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and hypertension. However, uUMOD levels also reflect functional kidney tubular mass in observational studies, questioning the causal link between uromodulin production and kidney damage. We used Mendelian randomization to clarify causality between uUMOD levels, kidney function and blood pressure in individuals of European descent. The link between uUMOD and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was first investigated in a population-based cohort of 3851 individuals. In observational data, higher uUMOD associated with higher eGFR. Conversely, when using rs12917707 (an UMOD polymorphism) as an instrumental variable in one-sample Mendelian randomization, higher uUMOD strongly associated with eGFR decline. We next applied two-sample Mendelian randomization on four genome wide association study consortia to explore causal links between uUMOD and eGFR, CKD risk (567,460 individuals) and blood pressure (757,461 individuals). Higher uUMOD levels significantly associated with lower eGFR, higher odds for eGFR decline or CKD, and higher systolic or diastolic blood pressure. Each one standard deviation (SD) increase of uUMOD decreased log-transformed eGFR by -0.15 SD (95% confidence interval -0.17 to -0.13) and increased log-odds CKD by 0.13 SD (0.12 to 0.15). One SD increase of uUMOD increased systolic blood pressure by 0.06 SD (0.03 to 0.09) and diastolic blood pressure by 0.08 SD (0.05 to 0.12). The effect of uUMOD on blood pressure was mediated by eGFR, whereas the effect on eGFR was not mediated by blood pressure. Thus, our data support that genetically driven levels of uromodulin have a direct, causal and adverse effect on kidney function outcome in the general population, not mediated by blood pressure.
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Genome-Wide Association Study; Mendelian randomization; blood pressure; chronic kidney disease; estimated glomerular filtration rate; uromodulin

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34634361     DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2021.08.032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  2 in total

1.  Meta-GWAS Reveals Novel Genetic Variants Associated with Urinary Excretion of Uromodulin.

Authors:  Christina B Joseph; Marta Mariniello; Ayumi Yoshifuji; Guglielmo Schiano; Jennifer Lake; Jonathan Marten; Anne Richmond; Jennifer E Huffman; Archie Campbell; Sarah E Harris; Stephan Troyanov; Massimiliano Cocca; Antonietta Robino; Sébastien Thériault; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Matthias Wuttke; Yurong Cheng; Tanguy Corre; Ivana Kolcic; Corrinda Black; Vanessa Bruat; Maria Pina Concas; Cinzia Sala; Stefanie Aeschbacher; Franz Schaefer; Sven Bergmann; Harry Campbell; Matthias Olden; Ozren Polasek; David J Porteous; Ian J Deary; Francois Madore; Philip Awadalla; Giorgia Girotto; Sheila Ulivi; David Conen; Elke Wuehl; Eric Olinger; James F Wilson; Murielle Bochud; Anna Köttgen; Caroline Hayward; Olivier Devuyst
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2022-03       Impact factor: 10.121

Review 2.  UMOD and the architecture of kidney disease.

Authors:  Olivier Devuyst; Murielle Bochud; Eric Olinger
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 4.458

  2 in total

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