Analysis of protein-altering variants in telomerase genes and their association with MUC5B common variant status in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: a candidate gene sequencing study

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) risk has a strong genetic component. Studies have implicated variations at several loci, including TERT, surfactant genes, and a single nucleotide polymorphism at chr11p15 (rs35705950) in the intergenic region between TOLLIP and MUC5B. Patients with IPF who have r...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet respiratory medicine 2018-08, Vol.6 (8), p.603-614
Hauptverfasser: Dressen, Amy, Abbas, Alexander R, Cabanski, Christopher, Reeder, Janina, Ramalingam, Thirumalai R, Neighbors, Margaret, Bhangale, Tushar R, Brauer, Matthew J, Hunkapiller, Julie, Reeder, Jens, Mukhyala, Kiran, Cuenco, Karen, Tom, Jennifer, Cowgill, Amy, Vogel, Jan, Forrest, William F, Collard, Harold R, Wolters, Paul J, Kropski, Jonathan A, Lancaster, Lisa H, Blackwell, Timothy S, Arron, Joseph R, Yaspan, Brian L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) risk has a strong genetic component. Studies have implicated variations at several loci, including TERT, surfactant genes, and a single nucleotide polymorphism at chr11p15 (rs35705950) in the intergenic region between TOLLIP and MUC5B. Patients with IPF who have risk alleles at rs35705950 have longer survival from the time of IPF diagnosis than do patients homozygous for the non-risk allele, whereas patients with shorter telomeres have shorter survival times. We aimed to assess whether rare protein-altering variants in genes regulating telomere length are enriched in patients with IPF homozygous for the non-risk alleles at rs35705950. Between Nov 1, 2014, and Nov 1, 2016, we assessed blood samples from patients aged 40 years or older and of European ancestry with sporadic IPF from three international phase 3 clinical trials (INSPIRE, CAPACITY, ASCEND), one phase 2 study (RIFF), and US-based observational studies (Vanderbilt Clinical Interstitial Lung Disease Registry and the UCSF Interstitial Lung Disease Clinic registry cohorts) at the Broad Institute (Cambridge, MA, USA) and Human Longevity (San Diego, CA, USA). We also assessed blood samples from non-IPF controls in several clinical trials. We did whole-genome sequencing to assess telomere length and identify rare protein-altering variants, stratified by rs35705950 genotype. We also assessed rare functional variation in TERT exons and compared telomere length and disease progression across genotypes. We assessed samples from 1510 patients with IPF and 1874 non-IPF controls. 30 (3%) of 1046 patients with an rs35705950 risk allele had a rare protein-altering variant in TERT compared with 34 (7%) of 464 non-risk allele carriers (odds ratio 0·40 [95% CI 0·24–0·66], p=0·00039). Subsequent analyses identified enrichment of rare protein-altering variants in PARN and RTEL1, and rare variation in TERC in patients with IPF compared with controls. We expanded our study population to provide a more accurate estimation of rare variant frequency in these four loci, and to calculate telomere length. The proportion of patients with at least one rare variant in TERT, PARN, TERC, or RTEL1 was higher in patients with IPF than in controls (149 [9%] of 1739 patients vs 205 [2%] of 8645 controls, p=2·44 × 10−8). Patients with IPF who had a variant in any of the four identified telomerase component genes had telomeres that were 3·69–16·10% shorter than patients without a variant in any of t
ISSN:2213-2600
2213-2619
DOI:10.1016/S2213-2600(18)30135-8