Whole Genome Sequencing of Pharmacogenetic Drug Response in Racially and Ethnically Diverse Children with Asthma

0 views • Nov 6, 2021
0
Save
Cite
Share

Author(s)

Author Name

Angel Mak

Published 3 Projects

genomics Genetics

Marquitta J White

Zachary A. Szpiech

Published 2 Projects

genomics Genetics

Walter L Eckalbar

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Maria Pino-Yanes

Donglei Hu

Published 2 Projects

Genetics

Pagé Goddard

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Scott Huntsman

Published 3 Projects

Genetics

Dara G Torgerson

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Ann Chen Wu

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Blanca E. Himes

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Soren Germer

Published 3 Projects

genomics Genetics

Julia M. Vogel

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Karen L. Bunting

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Celeste Eng

Published 3 Projects

Genetics

Sandra Salazar

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Kevin L. Keys

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Jennifer Liberto

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Thomas J. Nuckton

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Thomas A. Nguyen

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Pui-Yan Kwok

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Albert M Levin

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Juan C. Celedón

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Erick Forno

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Hakon Hakonarson

Published 3 Projects

Genetics

Patrick M. Sleiman

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Amber Dahlin

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Kelan G. Tantisira

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Scott T Weiss

Denise Serebrisky

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Emerita Brigino-Buenaventura

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Harold J. Farber

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Kelley Meade

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Michael A. Lenoir

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Pedro C Avila

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Saunak Sen

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Shannon M. Thyne

Published 1 Project

Genetics

William Rodriguez-Cintron

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Cheryl A. Winkler

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Andrés Moreno-Estrada

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Karla Sandoval

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Jose R. Rodriguez-Santana

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Rajesh Kumar

Published 1 Project

Genetics

L. Keoki Williams

Published 2 Projects

genomics Genetics

Nadav Ahituv

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Elad Ziv

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Max A. Seibold

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Robert B. Darnell

Published 1 Project

Genetics

Noah Zaitlen

Published 3 Projects

Genetics

Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra

Published 4 Projects

genomics Genetics

Esteban G. Burchard

Add New Author

Asthma is the most common chronic disease of children, with significant racial/ethnic differences in prevalence, morbidity, mortality and therapeutic response. Albuterol, a bronchodilator medication, is the first-line therapy for asthma treatment worldwide. We performed the largest whole genome sequencing (WGS) pharmacogenetics study to date using data from 1,441 minority children with asthma who had extremely high or low bronchodilator drug response (BDR). We identified population-specific and shared pharmacogenetic variants associated with BDR, including genome-wide significant (p < 3.53 x 10-7) and suggestive (p < 7.06 x 10-6) loci near genes previously associated with lung capacity (DNAH5), immunity (NFKB1 and PLCB1), and β-adrenergic signaling pathways (ADAMTS3 and COX18). Functional analyses centered on NFKB1 revealed potential regulatory function of our BDR-associated SNPs in bronchial smooth muscle cells. Specifically, these variants are in linkage disequilibrium with SNPs in a functionally active enhancer, and are also expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) for a neighboring gene, SLC39A8. Given the lack of other asthma study populations with WGS data on minority children, replication of our rare variant associations is infeasible. We attempted to replicate our common variant findings in five independent studies with GWAS data. The age-specific associations previously found in asthma and asthma-related traits suggest that the over-representation of adults in our replication populations may have contributed to our lack of statistical replication, despite the functional relevance of the NFKB1 variants demonstrated by our functional assays. Our study expands the understanding of pharmacogenetic analyses in racially/ethnically diverse populations and advances the foundation for precision medicine in at-risk and understudied minority populations.

Genetics
Genetics 59 Projects