4.7 Article

Gene-Smoking Interaction Analysis for the Identification of Novel Asthma-Associated Genetic Factors

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241512266

Keywords

asthma; gene-environment interactions; Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study; genome-wide association study; smoking status

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By investigating the genomes of 66,857 individuals from different studies, we identified two potentially novel genes (SETDB1 and ZNF8) and five previously reported genes (DM4C, DOCK8, MMP20, MYL7, and ADCY9) associated with increased asthma risk.
Asthma is a complex heterogeneous disease caused by gene-environment interactions. Although numerous genome-wide association studies have been conducted, these interactions have not been systemically investigated. We sought to identify genetic factors associated with the asthma phenotype in 66,857 subjects from the Health Examination Study, Cardiovascular Disease Association Study, and Korea Association Resource Study cohorts. We investigated asthma-associated gene-environment (smoking status) interactions at the level of single nucleotide polymorphisms, genes, and gene sets. We identified two potentially novel (SETDB1 and ZNF8) and five previously reported (DM4C, DOCK8, MMP20, MYL7, and ADCY9) genes associated with increased asthma risk. Numerous gene ontology processes, including regulation of T cell differentiation in the thymus (GO:0033081), were significantly enriched for asthma risk. Functional annotation analysis confirmed the causal relationship between five genes (two potentially novel and three previously reported genes) and asthma through genome-wide functional prediction scores (combined annotation-dependent depletion, deleterious annotation of genetic variants using neural networks, and RegulomeDB). Our findings elucidate the genetic architecture of asthma and improve the understanding of its biological mechanisms. However, further studies are necessary for developing preventive treatments based on environmental factors and understanding the immune system mechanisms that contribute to the etiology of asthma.

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