Genome-wide interaction studies reveal sex-specific asthma risk alleles

Asthma is a complex disease with sex-specific differences in prevalence. Candidate gene studies have suggested that genotype-by-sex interaction effects on asthma risk exist, but this has not yet been explored at a genome-wide level. We aimed to identify sex-specific asthma risk alleles by performing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human molecular genetics 2014-10, Vol.23 (19), p.5251-5259
Hauptverfasser: Myers, Rachel A, Scott, Nicole M, Gauderman, W James, Qiu, Weiliang, Mathias, Rasika A, Romieu, Isabelle, Levin, Albert M, Pino-Yanes, Maria, Graves, Penelope E, Villarreal, Albino Barraza, Beaty, Terri H, Carey, Vincent J, Croteau-Chonka, Damien C, del Rio Navarro, Blanca, Edlund, Christopher, Hernandez-Cadena, Leticia, Navarro-Olivos, Efrain, Padhukasahasram, Badri, Salam, Muhammad T, Torgerson, Dara G, Van den Berg, David J, Vora, Hita, Bleecker, Eugene R, Meyers, Deborah A, Williams, L Keoki, Martinez, Fernando D, Burchard, Esteban G, Barnes, Kathleen C, Gilliland, Frank D, Weiss, Scott T, London, Stephanie J, Raby, Benjamin A, Ober, Carole, Nicolae, Dan L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Asthma is a complex disease with sex-specific differences in prevalence. Candidate gene studies have suggested that genotype-by-sex interaction effects on asthma risk exist, but this has not yet been explored at a genome-wide level. We aimed to identify sex-specific asthma risk alleles by performing a genome-wide scan for genotype-by-sex interactions in the ethnically diverse participants in the EVE Asthma Genetics Consortium. We performed male- and female-specific genome-wide association studies in 2653 male asthma cases, 2566 female asthma cases and 3830 non-asthma controls from European American, African American, African Caribbean and Latino populations. Association tests were conducted in each study sample, and the results were combined in ancestry-specific and cross-ancestry meta-analyses. Six sex-specific asthma risk loci had P-values < 1 × 10(-6), of which two were male specific and four were female specific; all were ancestry specific. The most significant sex-specific association in European Americans was at the interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF1) locus on 5q31.1. We also identify a Latino female-specific association in RAP1GAP2. Both of these loci included single-nucleotide polymorphisms that are known expression quantitative trait loci and have been associated with asthma in independent studies. The IRF1 locus is a strong candidate region for male-specific asthma susceptibility due to the association and validation we demonstrate here, the known role of IRF1 in asthma-relevant immune pathways and prior reports of sex-specific differences in interferon responses.
ISSN:0964-6906
1460-2083
DOI:10.1093/hmg/ddu222