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SNPs associated withHHIPexpression have differential effects on lung function in males and females

Authors :
Peter D. Sly
Re Foong
Ozren Polasek
Nicole Probst-Hensch
Ian P. Hall
Graham L. Hall
Tobin
Pirro G. Hysi
Teemu Palviainen
Mika Kähönen
Veronique Vitart
Louise V. Wain
Carl A. Melbourne
Don D. Sin
Anna L. Guyatt
Henry Völzke
Ca Wang
Katherine A. Fawcett
David J. Porteous
John M. Starr
Claudia Langenberg
Igor Rudan
Ke Hao
Stefan Weiss
Terho Lehtimäki
Kirsi H. Pietiläinen
David M. Evans
Ian J. Deary
Jian'an Luan
James F. Wilson
David P. Strachan
Taina Rantanen
Catherine John
Nicola Pirastu
O T Raitakari
Berge M van den
Karina Patasova
Claudia Flexeder
Medea Imboden
Thibaud Boutin
Mangino Massimo
Archie Campbell
Lucija Klaric
Leo-Pekka Lyytikäinen
Nick Shrine
Sebastian May-Wilson
Beate Stubbe
Ralf Ewert
Dirk Keidel
Sarah E. Harris
Tim D. Spector
Ma'en Obeidat
John Henderson
Cosetta Minelli
Moksnes
Raquel Granell
Blair H. Smith
Arnulf Langhammer
Craig E. Pennell
Nicholas J. Wareham
Caroline Hayward
Ben Michael Brumpton
Yohan Bossé
Peter K. Joshi
Susan M. Ring
Sandosh Padmanabhan
Cristen J. Willer
Kristian Hveem
Deborah Jarvis
J Kaprio
Laura Portas
Anne Richmond
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Adult lung function is highly heritable and 279 genetic loci were recently reported as associated with spirometry-based measures of lung function. Though lung development and function differ between males and females throughout life, there has been no genome-wide study to identify genetic variants with differential effects on lung function in males and females. Here, we present the first genome-wide genotype-by-sex interaction study on four lung function traits in 303,612 participants from the UK Biobank. We detected five SNPs showing genome-wide significant (P−8) interactions with sex on lung function, as well as 21 suggestively significant interactions (P−6). The strongest sex interaction signal came from rs7697189 at 4:145436894 on forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) (P = 3.15 × 10−15), and was replicated (P = 0.016) in 75,696 individuals in the SpiroMeta consortium. Sex-stratified analyses demonstrated that the minor (C) allele of rs7697189 increased lung function to a greater extent in males than females (untransformed FEV1β = 0.028 [SE 0.0022] litres in males vs β = 0.009 [SE 0.0014] litres in females), and this effect was not accounted for by differential effects on height, smoking or age at puberty. This SNP resides upstream of the gene encoding hedgehog-interacting protein (HHIP) and has previously been reported for association with lung function andHHIPexpression in lung tissue. In our analyses, whileHHIPexpression in lung tissue was significantly different between the sexes with females having higher expression (most significant probeset P=6.90 × 10−6) after adjusting for age and smoking, rs7697189 did not demonstrate sex differential effects on expression. Establishing the mechanism by whichHHIPSNPs have different effects on lung function in males and females will be important for our understanding of lung health and diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), in both sexes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....67d8b91786df855b049a3c8f757942a6