scholarly journals Genome-wide analysis of 944 133 individuals provides insights into the etiology of haemorrhoidal disease

Gut ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. gutjnl-2020-323868
Author(s):  
Tenghao Zheng ◽  
David Ellinghaus ◽  
Simonas Juzenas ◽  
François Cossais ◽  
Greta Burmeister ◽  
...  

ObjectiveHaemorrhoidal disease (HEM) affects a large and silently suffering fraction of the population but its aetiology, including suspected genetic predisposition, is poorly understood. We report the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis to identify genetic risk factors for HEM to date.DesignWe conducted a GWAS meta-analysis of 218 920 patients with HEM and 725 213 controls of European ancestry. Using GWAS summary statistics, we performed multiple genetic correlation analyses between HEM and other traits as well as calculated HEM polygenic risk scores (PRS) and evaluated their translational potential in independent datasets. Using functional annotation of GWAS results, we identified HEM candidate genes, which differential expression and coexpression in HEM tissues were evaluated employing RNA-seq analyses. The localisation of expressed proteins at selected loci was investigated by immunohistochemistry.ResultsWe demonstrate modest heritability and genetic correlation of HEM with several other diseases from the GI, neuroaffective and cardiovascular domains. HEM PRS validated in 180 435 individuals from independent datasets allowed the identification of those at risk and correlated with younger age of onset and recurrent surgery. We identified 102 independent HEM risk loci harbouring genes whose expression is enriched in blood vessels and GI tissues, and in pathways associated with smooth muscles, epithelial and endothelial development and morphogenesis. Network transcriptomic analyses highlighted HEM gene coexpression modules that are relevant to the development and integrity of the musculoskeletal and epidermal systems, and the organisation of the extracellular matrix.ConclusionHEM has a genetic component that predisposes to smooth muscle, epithelial and connective tissue dysfunction.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tenghao Zheng ◽  
David Ellinghaus ◽  
Simonas Juzenas ◽  
François Cossais ◽  
Greta Burmeister ◽  
...  

AbstractHemorrhoidal disease (HEM) affects a large fraction of the population but its etiology including suspected genetic predisposition is poorly understood. We conducted a GWAS meta-analysis of 218,920 HEM patients and 725,213 controls of European ancestry, demonstrating modest heritability and genetic correlation with several other diseases from the gastrointestinal, neuroaffective and cardiovascular domains. HEM polygenic risk scores validated in 180,435 individuals from independent datasets allowed the identification of those at risk and correlated with younger age of onset and recurrent surgery. We identified 102 independent HEM risk loci harboring genes whose expression is enriched in blood vessels and gastrointestinal tissues, and in pathways associated with smooth muscles, epithelial and endothelial development and morphogenesis. Network transcriptomic analyses of affected tissue from HEM patients highlighted HEM gene co-expression modules that are relevant to the development and integrity of the musculoskeletal and epidermal systems, and the organization of the extracellular matrix. We conclude HEM has a genetic component that predisposes to smooth muscle, epithelial and connective tissue dysfunction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. e560
Author(s):  
Jiang Li ◽  
Durgesh P. Chaudhary ◽  
Ayesha Khan ◽  
Christoph Griessenauer ◽  
David J. Carey ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo determine whether the polygenic risk score (PRS) derived from MEGASTROKE is associated with ischemic stroke (IS) and its subtypes in an independent tertiary health care system and to identify the PRS derived from gene sets of known biological pathways associated with IS.MethodsControls (n = 19,806/7,484, age ≥69/79 years) and cases (n = 1,184/951 for discovery/replication) of acute IS with European ancestry and clinical risk factors were identified by leveraging the Geisinger Electronic Health Record and chart review confirmation. All Geisinger MyCode patients with age ≥69/79 years and without any stroke-related diagnostic codes were included as low risk control. Genetic heritability and genetic correlation between Geisinger and MEGASTROKE (EUR) were calculated using the summary statistics of the genome-wide association study by linkage disequilibrium score regression. All PRS for any stroke (AS), any ischemic stroke (AIS), large artery stroke (LAS), cardioembolic stroke (CES), and small vessel stroke (SVS) were constructed by PRSice-2.ResultsA moderate heritability (10%–20%) for Geisinger sample as well as the genetic correlation between MEGASTROKE and the Geisinger cohort was identified. Variation of all 5 PRS significantly explained some of the phenotypic variations of Geisinger IS, and the R2 increased by raising the cutoff for the age of controls. PRSLAS, PRSCES, and PRSSVS derived from low-frequency common variants provided the best fit for modeling (R2 = 0.015 for PRSLAS). Gene sets analyses highlighted the association of PRS with Gene Ontology terms (vascular endothelial growth factor, amyloid precursor protein, and atherosclerosis). The PRSLAS, PRSCES, and PRSSVS explained the most variance of the corresponding subtypes of Geisinger IS suggesting shared etiologies and corroborated Geisinger TOAST subtyping.ConclusionsWe provide the first evidence that PRSs derived from MEGASTROKE have value in identifying shared etiologies and determining stroke subtypes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
N Pujol Gualdo ◽  
K Läll ◽  
M Lepamets ◽  
R Arffman ◽  
T Piltonen ◽  
...  

Abstract Study question Can genome-wide association analysis unravel the biological underpinnings of PP and facilitate personalized risk assessment via genetic risk scores construction? Summary answer We unravel novel links with urogenital development and vascular health in PP and present polygenic risk score as a tool to stratify PP risk. What is known already Prolapse is characterized by a descent of the pelvic organs into the vaginal cavity. PP affects around 40% of women after menopause and is the main indication for major gynecological surgery, having an important health, social and economic burden. Although the etiology and biological mechanisms underlying PP remain poorly understood, prior studies suggest genetic factors might play a role. Recently, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) identified seven genome-wide significant loci, located in or near genes involved in connective tissue metabolism and estrogen exposure in the etiology of PP. Study design, size, duration We conducted a three-stage case-control genome-wide association study. Firstly, in the discovery phase, we meta-analyzed Icelandic, UK Biobank and the FinnGen R3 datasets, comprising a total of 20118 cases and 427426 controls of European ancestry. For replication we used an independent dataset from Estonian Biobank (7968 cases and 118895 controls). Finally, we conducted a joint meta-analysis, containing 28086 cases and 546321 controls, which is the largest GWAS of PP to date. Participants/materials, setting, methods We performed functional annotation on genetic variants unraveled by GWAS and integrated these with expression quantitative trait loci and chromatin interaction data. In addition, we looked at enrichment of association signal on gene-set, tissue and cell type level and analyzed associations with other phenotypes both on genetic and phenotypic level. Colocalisation analyses were conducted to help pinpoint causal genes. We further constructed polygenic risk scores to explore options for personalized risk assessment and prevention. Main results and the role of chance In the discovery phase, we identified 18 genetic loci and 20 genetic variants significantly associated with POP (p < 5 × 10−8) and 75% of the variants show nominal significance association (p < 0.05) in the replication. Notably, the joint meta-analyses detected 20 genetic loci significantly associated with POP, from which 13 loci were novel. Novel genetic variants are located in or near genes involved in gestational duration and preterm birth (rs2687728 p = 2.19x10-9, EEFSEC), cardiovascular health and pregnancy success (rs1247943 p = 5.83x10-18, KLF13), endometriosis (rs12325192 p = 3.72x10-18, CRISPLD2), urogenital tract development (rs7126322, p = 4.35x10-15, WT1 and rs42400, p = 4.8x10-10, ADAMTS16) and regulation of the oxytocin receptor (rs2267372, p = 4.49x10-13, MAFF). Further analyses demonstrated that POP GWAS signals colocalise with several eQTLS (including EEFSEC, MAFF, KLF13, etc.), providing further evidence for mapping associated genes. Tissue and cell enrichment analyses underlined the role of the urogenital system, muscle cells, myocytes and adipocytes (p < 0.00001, FDR<0.05). Furthermore, genetic correlation analyses supported a shared genetic background with gastrointestinal disorders, joint and musculoskeletal disorders and cardiovascular disease. Polygenic risk scores analyses included a total of 125551 people in the target dataset, with 5379 prevalent patients and 2517 incident patients. Analyzing the best GRS as a quintile showed association with incident disease (Harrell c-statistic= 0.603, SD = 0.006). Limitations, reasons for caution This GWAS meta-analyses focused on European ancestry populations, which challenges the generalizability of GWAS findings to non-European populations. Moreover, this study included women with PP from population-based biobanks identified using the ICD-10 code N81, which limits analyses considering different disease stages and severity. Wider implications of the findings Our study provides genetic evidence to improve the current understanding of PP pathogenesis and serves as basis for further functional studies. Moreover, we provide a genetic tool for personalized risk stratification, which could help prevent PP development and improve the quality of a vast quantity of women. Trial registration number not applicable


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Juan Qiu ◽  
Kang-Jia Yin ◽  
Gui-Xia Pan ◽  
Jing Ni ◽  
Bin Wang

Background: Asthma is observationally associated with an increased risk of COVID-19, but the causality remains unclear. We aim to determine whether there is a casual role of asthma in susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 infection or COVID-19 severity.Methods: Instrumental variables (IVs) for asthma and moderate-to-severe asthma were obtained from publicly available summary statistics from the most recent and largest genome-wide association study (GWAS), including 394 283 and 57 695 participants of European ancestry, respectively. The corresponding data for COVID-19 susceptibility, hospitalization and severe-disease were derived from the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative GWAS meta-analysis of up to 1 683 768 individuals of European descent. Causality was inferred between correlated traits by Mendelian Randomization analyses. Inverse-variance weighted method was used as the primary MR estimates and multiple alternate approaches and several sensitivity analyses were also conducted.Results: Our MR analysis revealed no causal effects of asthma on COVID-19 susceptibility, hospitalization or severe disease, with odds ratio (OR) of 0.994 (95% CI: 0.962–1.027), 1.020 (95% CI: 0.955–1.089), and 0.929 (95% CI: 0.836–1.032), respectively. Furthermore, using genetic variants for moderate-to-severe asthma, a similar pattern of results was observed for COVID-19 susceptibility (OR: 0.988, 95% CI: 0.946–1.031), hospitalization (OR: 0.967, 95% CI: 0.906–1.031), and severe disease (OR: 0.911, 95% CI: 0.823–1.009). The association of asthma and moderate-to-severe asthma with COVID-19 was overall robust to sensitivity analyses.Conclusion: Genetically predicted asthma was not associated with susceptibility to, or severity of, COVID-19 disease, indicating that asthma is unlikely to be a causal factor in the development of COVID-19.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongping Liu ◽  
Xue Wu ◽  
Xi Xia ◽  
Jun Yao ◽  
Bao-jie Wang

Abstract Background: The CACNA1C gene was defined as a risk gene for schizophrenia in a large genome-wide association study of European ancestry performed by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. Previous meta-analyses focused on the association between the CACNA1C gene rs1006737 and schizophrenia. The present study focused on whether there was a racial difference in the effect of the CACNA1C gene rs1006737 on schizophrenia. rs2007044 and rs4765905 were analyzed for their effect on the risk of schizophrenia. Methods: Pooled, subgroup, sensitivity, and publication bias analysis were conducted.Results: A total of 18 studies met the inclusion criteria, including fourteen rs1006737 studies (15,213 cases, 19,412 controls), three rs2007044 studies (6,007 cases, 6,518 controls), and two rs4765905 studies (2,435 cases, 2,639 controls). An allele model study also related rs2007044 and rs4765905 to schizophrenia. The overall meta-analysis for rs1006737, which included the allele contrast, dominant, recessive, codominance, and complete overdominance models, showed significant differences between rs1006737 and schizophrenia. However, the race-based subgroup analysis for rs1006737 found that the genotypes GG and GG + GA were only protective factors for schizophrenia in European populations. In contrast, the rs1006737 GA genotype only reduced the risk of schizophrenia in Asian populations. Conclusions: Rs1006737, rs2007044, and rs4765905 of the CACNA1C gene were associated with susceptibility to schizophrenia. However, the influence model for rs1006737 on schizophrenia in Asian and European populations demonstrated both similarities and differences between the two populations.


Stroke ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Jaworek ◽  
Steven J Kittner ◽  
Christina Jern ◽  
Frank Erik de Leeuw ◽  
Martin Dichgans ◽  
...  

Introduction: Genetic studies of early-onset disease have been an effective strategy to identify novel pathways and drug targets relevant to later-onset disease. Few studies have investigated the role of common genetic variation in the etiology of early-onset ischemic stroke (IS). Methods: We performed a GWAS meta-analysis of 38 studies from 10 countries, comprised of 5,847 IS cases of European ancestry under age 60 and 32,533 controls. Results: We identified two genome-wide significant (p< 5 x 10 -8 ) loci (see Figure). The ABO locus has previously been associated with venous thrombosis and ischemic stroke in predominantly older adults, but the effect size of our top SNP (OR 1.18; p = 9.1 x 10 -12 ) is larger than the effect size for this same SNP in MEGASTROKE (OR: 1.05; p = 6.5 x 10 -5 ). The lead SNP at the BCL7A/MLXIP locus is a novel GWAS finding for stroke (OR 1.14, 95% CI 1.08-1.19; p = 1.7 x 10 -8 ) and is noteworthy because of prior reports linking SNPs in these genes to BMI and blood pressure. Conclusions: We identified a novel locus that is near variants associated with BMI and blood pressure. Further studies are needed to confirm this locus, examine subtype specificity, and determine its function. The larger effect size observed at the ABO in this early-onset IS sample compared to older-onset IS samples is consistent with a larger role for prothrombotic mechanisms in early-onset IS.


Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (Suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aeron M Small ◽  
Gina Peloso ◽  
Jayashri Aragam ◽  
JASON LINEFSKY ◽  
Ashley Galloway ◽  
...  

Introduction: Valvular aortic stenosis (AS) is common with high morbidity and mortality in the absence of surgical intervention, but no current medical therapies are known to prevent or slow disease progression. Previous genetic studies have identified several genetic loci associated with prevalent AS, including LPA and PALMD , although most evidence is limited to populations of European ancestry. Methods: We performed a trans-ethnic genome-wide association study (GWAS) of prevalent AS in the Veterans Administration Million Veteran Program (MVP). Cases were identified by a combination of diagnostic billing and surgical codes and validated by association to the known LPA variant (rs10455872). GWAS was run separately for White, Black, and Hispanic individuals, controlling for age, sex, and six principal components, and combined using fixed effects meta-analysis. Results were limited to variants with a minor allele frequency greater than 1% in the trans-ancestry analysis. Lead independent genome wide significant loci were annotated by nearest gene. Results: 300,182 White, 80,744 Black, and 32,069 Hispanic participants were available for analysis. Of these, there were 12,385 (4.1%) White, 1,444 (1.8%) Black, and 611 (1.9%) Hispanic AS cases. Trans-ethnic analyses identified 10 independent genome wide significant (GWS, p≤5x10 -8 ) loci, replicating 6 known AS genetic loci ( ALPL, PALMD, TEX41, LPA, IL6, FADS1 ), and identifying 4 novel genetic loci ( CEP85L, CELSR2, NCK1, SLMAP ), of which 2 were present at nominal significance in Hispanic ( CELS2R ) or Black ( SLMAP ) individuals. Ethnicity-specific analyses additionally identified 9 novel GWS loci in White individuals, and 3 novel GWS loci in Hispanic individuals. Newly identified loci supported known biological pathways in AS including lipid/metabolic, inflammatory, and calcification, but also implicated new pathways such as those pertaining to QT interval ( SLC35F1 ) and the Brugada Syndrome ( SLMAP ). Conclusions: In this large trans-ethnic GWAS for AS we replicate previously identified genetic loci for AS, and identified several novel loci both in trans-ethnic and in ethnic-specific analyses. These loci implicate known and novel biological mechanisms for future prevention and treatment of AS.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryoichi Nakamura ◽  
Kazuharu Misawa ◽  
Genki Tohnai ◽  
Masahiro Nakatochi ◽  
Sho Furuhashi ◽  
...  

Abstract Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating progressive motor neuron disease that affects people of all ethnicities. Approximately 90% of ALS cases are sporadic and thought to have multifactorial pathogenesis. To understand the genetics of sporadic ALS, we conducted a genome-wide association study using 1,173 sporadic ALS cases and 8,925 controls in a Japanese population. A combined meta-analysis of our Japanese cohort with individuals of European ancestry revealed a significant association at the ACSL5 locus (top SNP p = 2.97 × 10−8). We validated the association with ACSL5 in a replication study with a Chinese population and an independent Japanese population (1941 ALS cases, 3821 controls; top SNP p = 1.82 × 10−4). In the combined meta-analysis, the intronic ACSL5 SNP rs3736947 showed the strongest association (p = 7.81 × 10−11). Using a gene-based analysis of the full multi-ethnic dataset, we uncovered additional genes significantly associated with ALS: ERGIC1, RAPGEF5, FNBP1, and ATXN3. These results advance our understanding of the genetic basis of sporadic ALS.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia R. Martin ◽  
Masahiro Kanai ◽  
Yoichiro Kamatani ◽  
Yukinori Okada ◽  
Benjamin M. Neale ◽  
...  

AbstractPolygenic risk scores (PRS) are poised to improve biomedical outcomes via precision medicine. However, the major ethical and scientific challenge surrounding clinical implementation is that they are many-fold more accurate in European ancestry individuals than others. This disparity is an inescapable consequence of Eurocentric genome-wide association study biases. This highlights that—unlike clinical biomarkers and prescription drugs, which may individually work better in some populations but do not ubiquitously perform far better in European populations—clinical uses of PRS today would systematically afford greater improvement to European descent populations. Early diversifying efforts show promise in levelling this vast imbalance, even when non-European sample sizes are considerably smaller than the largest studies to date. To realize the full and equitable potential of PRS, we must prioritize greater diversity in genetic studies and public dissemination of summary statistics to ensure that health disparities are not increased for those already most underserved.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian I Campos ◽  
Nathan Ingold ◽  
Yunru Huang ◽  
Pik Fang Kho ◽  
Xikun Han ◽  
...  

Rationale: Sleep apnoea is a complex disorder characterised by periods of halted breathing during sleep. Despite its association with serious health conditions such as cardiovascular disease, the aetiology of sleep apnoea remains understudied, and previous genetic studies have failed to identify replicable genetic risk factors. Objective: To advance our understanding of factors that increase susceptibility to sleep apnoea by identifying novel genetic associations. Methods: We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of sleep apnoea across five cohorts, and a previously published GWAS of apnoea-hypopnea index (N Total =510,484). Further, we used multi-trait analysis of GWAS (MTAG) to boost statistical power, leveraging the high genetic correlations between apnoea, snoring and body mass index. Replication was performed in an independent sample from 23andMe, Inc (N Total =1,477,352; N cases =175,522). Results: Our results revealed 39 independent genomic loci robustly associated with sleep apnoea risk, and significant genetic correlations with multisite chronic pain, sleep disorders, diabetes, high blood pressure, osteoarthritis, asthma and BMI-related traits. We also derived polygenic risk scores for sleep apnoea in a leave-one-out independent cohort and predicted probable sleep apnoea in participants (OR=1.15 to 1.22; variance explained = 0.4 to 0.9%). Conclusions: We report novel genetic markers robustly associated with sleep apnoea risk and substantial molecular overlap with other complex traits, thus advancing our understanding of the underlying biological mechanisms of susceptibility to sleep apnoea.


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