Variant-to-Gene-Mapping Analyses Reveal a Role for the Hypothalamus in Genetic Susceptibility to Inflammatory Bowel Disease

变异基因图谱分析揭示下丘脑在炎症性肠病遗传易感性中的作用

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作者:Chiara Lasconi, Matthew C Pahl, Diana L Cousminer, Claudia A Doege, Alessandra Chesi, Kenyaita M Hodge, Michelle E Leonard, Sumei Lu, Matthew E Johnson, Chun Su, Reza K Hammond, James A Pippin, Natalie A Terry, Louis R Ghanem, Rudolph L Leibel, Andrew D Wells, Struan F A Grant

Aims

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a polygenic disorder characterized principally by dysregulated inflammation impacting the gastrointestinal tract. However, there also is increasing evidence for a clinical association with stress and depression. Given the role of the hypothalamus in stress responses and in the pathogenesis of depression, useful insights could be gleaned from understanding its genetic role in IBD.

Background & aims

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a polygenic disorder characterized principally by dysregulated inflammation impacting the gastrointestinal tract. However, there also is increasing evidence for a clinical association with stress and depression. Given the role of the hypothalamus in stress responses and in the pathogenesis of depression, useful insights could be gleaned from understanding its genetic role in IBD.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that the hypothalamus warrants further study in the context of IBD pathogenesis.

Methods

We conducted genetic correlation analyses on publicly available genome-wide association study summary statistics for depression and IBD traits to identify genetic commonalities. We used partitioned linkage disequilibrium score regression, leveraging our ATAC sequencing and promoter-focused Capture C data, to measure enrichment of IBD single-nucleotide polymorphisms within promoter-interacting open chromatin regions of human embryonic stem cell-derived hypothalamic-like neurons (HNs). Using the same data sets, we performed variant-to-gene mapping to implicate putative IBD effector genes in HNs. To contrast these

Results

We found significant genetic correlations (rg) of 0.122 with an adjusted P (Padj) = 1.4 × 10-4 for IBD: rg = 0.122; Padj = 2.5 × 10-3 for ulcerative colitis and genetic correlation (rg) = 0.094; Padj = 2.5 × 10-3 for Crohn's disease, and significant approximately 4-fold (P = .005) and approximately 7-fold (P = .03) enrichment of IBD single-nucleotide polymorphisms in HNs and colonoids, respectively. We implicated 25 associated genes in HNs, among which CREM, CNTF, and RHOA encode key regulators of stress. Seven genes also additionally were implicated in the colonoids. We observed an overall enrichment for immune and hormonal signaling pathways, and a colonoid-specific enrichment for microbiota-relevant terms. Conclusions: Our results suggest that the hypothalamus warrants further study in the context of IBD pathogenesis.

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