4.7 Article

TSLP disease-associated genetic variants combined with airway TSLP expression influence asthma risk

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 149, Issue 1, Pages 79-88

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2021.05.033

Keywords

TSLP; asthma; genotype; gene; biomarker; gene expression; mRNA

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R01AI127392, U19AI1070235]

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This study found that the combined effects of TSLP genotype and TSLP expression play a role in modulating childhood asthma. Increased TSLP mRNA expression is associated with increased asthma risk, while circulating TSLP is not associated with asthma.
Background: Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) is an epithelial-derived cytokine important in initiation of allergic inflammation. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in TSLP are associated with asthma, yet studies have shown inconsistent associations between circulating TSLP and asthma. Studies that integrate the combined effects of TSLP genotype, TSLP mRNA, circulating TSLP levels, and asthma outcome are lacking. Objectives: This study sought to recruit a novel cohort based on asthma-relevant TSLP SNPs and determine their impact on TSLP mRNA expression and TSLP circulating protein levels, and their individual and combined effects on asthma. Methods: This study developed an algorithm to prioritize TSLP SNPs and recruited 51 carriers and noncarriers based on TSLP genotypes. TSLP mRNA was quantified in nasal epithelial cells and circulating TSLP levels in plasma. This study determined the associations of defined TSLP risk genotypes and/or TSLP mRNA and protein levels with asthma. Results: TSLP mRNA expression, but not circulating TSLP, was significantly increased in people who are asthmatic compared with in people who are nonasthmatic (P = .007; odds ratio, 1.44). Notably, 90% of children with the defined TSLP risk genotypes and high nasal TSLP mRNA expression (top tertile) had asthma compared with 40% of subjects without risk genotypes and with low TSLP expression (bottom tertile) (P = .024). No association between circulating TSLP and asthma was observed. Conclusions: Collectively, these data suggest childhood asthma is modified by the combined effects of TSLP genotype and TSLP expression in the nasal epithelium. The increased asthma risk likely manifests when genetic variation enables expression quantitative trait loci in the TSLP locus to elevate TSLP. It is important to consider both biomarkers when factoring asthma risk.

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