Browsing by Author "Ingham, Andy"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Open Access An atlas connecting shared genetic architecture of human diseases and molecular phenotypes provides insight into COVID-19 susceptibility.(Genome medicine, 2021-05) Wang, Liuyang; Balmat, Thomas J; Antonia, Alejandro L; Constantine, Florica J; Henao, Ricardo; Burke, Thomas W; Ingham, Andy; McClain, Micah T; Tsalik, Ephraim L; Ko, Emily R; Ginsburg, Geoffrey S; DeLong, Mark R; Shen, Xiling; Woods, Christopher W; Hauser, Elizabeth R; Ko, Dennis CBackground
While genome-wide associations studies (GWAS) have successfully elucidated the genetic architecture of complex human traits and diseases, understanding mechanisms that lead from genetic variation to pathophysiology remains an important challenge. Methods are needed to systematically bridge this crucial gap to facilitate experimental testing of hypotheses and translation to clinical utility.Results
Here, we leveraged cross-phenotype associations to identify traits with shared genetic architecture, using linkage disequilibrium (LD) information to accurately capture shared SNPs by proxy, and calculate significance of enrichment. This shared genetic architecture was examined across differing biological scales through incorporating data from catalogs of clinical, cellular, and molecular GWAS. We have created an interactive web database (interactive Cross-Phenotype Analysis of GWAS database (iCPAGdb)) to facilitate exploration and allow rapid analysis of user-uploaded GWAS summary statistics. This database revealed well-known relationships among phenotypes, as well as the generation of novel hypotheses to explain the pathophysiology of common diseases. Application of iCPAGdb to a recent GWAS of severe COVID-19 demonstrated unexpected overlap of GWAS signals between COVID-19 and human diseases, including with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis driven by the DPP9 locus. Transcriptomics from peripheral blood of COVID-19 patients demonstrated that DPP9 was induced in SARS-CoV-2 compared to healthy controls or those with bacterial infection. Further investigation of cross-phenotype SNPs associated with both severe COVID-19 and other human traits demonstrated colocalization of the GWAS signal at the ABO locus with plasma protein levels of a reported receptor of SARS-CoV-2, CD209 (DC-SIGN). This finding points to a possible mechanism whereby glycosylation of CD209 by ABO may regulate COVID-19 disease severity.Conclusions
Thus, connecting genetically related traits across phenotypic scales links human diseases to molecular and cellular measurements that can reveal mechanisms and lead to novel biomarkers and therapeutic approaches. The iCPAGdb web portal is accessible at http://cpag.oit.duke.edu and the software code at https://github.com/tbalmat/iCPAGdb .Item Open Access An Atlas of Genetic Variation Linking Pathogen-Induced Cellular Traits to Human Disease.(Cell host & microbe, 2018-08) Wang, Liuyang; Pittman, Kelly J; Barker, Jeffrey R; Salinas, Raul E; Stanaway, Ian B; Williams, Graham D; Carroll, Robert J; Balmat, Tom; Ingham, Andy; Gopalakrishnan, Anusha M; Gibbs, Kyle D; Antonia, Alejandro L; eMERGE Network; Heitman, Joseph; Lee, Soo Chan; Jarvik, Gail P; Denny, Joshua C; Horner, Stacy M; DeLong, Mark R; Valdivia, Raphael H; Crosslin, David R; Ko, Dennis CPathogens have been a strong driving force for natural selection. Therefore, understanding how human genetic differences impact infection-related cellular traits can mechanistically link genetic variation to disease susceptibility. Here we report the Hi-HOST Phenome Project (H2P2): a catalog of cellular genome-wide association studies (GWAS) comprising 79 infection-related phenotypes in response to 8 pathogens in 528 lymphoblastoid cell lines. Seventeen loci surpass genome-wide significance for infection-associated phenotypes ranging from pathogen replication to cytokine production. We combined H2P2 with clinical association data from patients to identify a SNP near CXCL10 as a risk factor for inflammatory bowel disease. A SNP in the transcriptional repressor ZBTB20 demonstrated pleiotropy, likely through suppression of multiple target genes, and was associated with viral hepatitis. These data are available on a web portal to facilitate interpreting human genome variation through the lens of cell biology and should serve as a rich resource for the research community.