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The Genetic Landscape of Familial Pulmonary Fibrosis

Authors :
Qi Liu
Yuan Zhou
Joy D. Cogan
Daphne B. Mitchell
Quanhu Sheng
Shilin Zhao
Youhuang Bai
Kristen K. Ciombor
Carleen M. Sabusap
M. Merced Malabanan
Cheryl R. Markin
Katrina Douglas
Guixiao Ding
Nicholas E. Banovich
Deborah A. Nickerson
Elizabeth E. Blue
Michael J. Bamshad
Kevin K. Brown
David A. Schwartz
John A. Phillips
Ruben Martinez-Barricarte
Margaret L. Salisbury
Yu Shyr
James E. Loyd
Jonathan A. Kropski
Timothy S. Blackwell
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 207:1345-1357
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 2023.

Abstract

Up to 20% of idiopathic interstitial lung disease is familial, referred to as Familial Pulmonary Fibrosis (FPF). We performed an integrated analysis of FPF genetic risk by comprehensively evaluating for genetic rare variants (RVs) in a large cohort of FPF kindreds.We performed whole-exome sequencing and/or candidate gene sequencing from affected individuals in 569 FPF kindreds, followed by co-segregation analysis in large kindreds, gene burden analysis, gene-based risk scoring, cell type enrichment analysis, and co-expression network construction.We found that 14.9% - 23.4% of genetic risk in kindreds could be explained by RVs in genes previously linked to FPF, predominantly telomere related genes. We identified new candidate genes in a small number of families, including SYDE1, SERPINB8, GPR87, and NETO1, and developed tools for evaluation and prioritization of RV-containing genes across kindreds. Several pathways were enriched for RV-containing genes in FPF, including focal adhesion and mitochondrial complex I assembly. By combining single cell transcriptomics with prioritized candidate genes, we discovered that expression of RV-containing genes was enriched in smooth muscle cells, type II alveolar epithelial cells, and endothelial cells.In the most comprehensive FPF genetic study to date, we defined the prevalence of RVs in known FPF-related genes and identified new candidate genes and pathways relevant to FPF. However, we did not identify new RV-containing genes shared across multiple kindreds, thereby suggesting that heterogeneous genetic variants involving a variety of genes and pathways mediate genetic risk in most FPF kindreds.

Details

ISSN :
15354970 and 1073449X
Volume :
207
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c3b0fac5c1cf67bc9a45037056a78d13