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Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate gene studies have identified a number of risk loci associated with the smoking-related disease COPD, a disorder that originates in the airway epithelium. Since airway basal cell (BC) stem/progenitor cells exhibit the earliest abnormalities associa...

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Autores principales: Ryan, Dorothy M., Vincent, Thomas L., Salit, Jacqueline, Walters, Matthew S., Agosto-Perez, Francisco, Shaykhiev, Renat, Strulovici-Barel, Yael, Downey, Robert J., Buro-Auriemma, Lauren J., Staudt, Michelle R., Hackett, Neil R., Mezey, Jason G., Crystal, Ronald G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3912203/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088051
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author Ryan, Dorothy M.
Vincent, Thomas L.
Salit, Jacqueline
Walters, Matthew S.
Agosto-Perez, Francisco
Shaykhiev, Renat
Strulovici-Barel, Yael
Downey, Robert J.
Buro-Auriemma, Lauren J.
Staudt, Michelle R.
Hackett, Neil R.
Mezey, Jason G.
Crystal, Ronald G.
author_facet Ryan, Dorothy M.
Vincent, Thomas L.
Salit, Jacqueline
Walters, Matthew S.
Agosto-Perez, Francisco
Shaykhiev, Renat
Strulovici-Barel, Yael
Downey, Robert J.
Buro-Auriemma, Lauren J.
Staudt, Michelle R.
Hackett, Neil R.
Mezey, Jason G.
Crystal, Ronald G.
author_sort Ryan, Dorothy M.
collection PubMed
description Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate gene studies have identified a number of risk loci associated with the smoking-related disease COPD, a disorder that originates in the airway epithelium. Since airway basal cell (BC) stem/progenitor cells exhibit the earliest abnormalities associated with smoking (hyperplasia, squamous metaplasia), we hypothesized that smoker BC have a dysregulated transcriptome, enriched, in part, at known GWAS/candidate gene loci. Massive parallel RNA sequencing was used to compare the transcriptome of BC purified from the airway epithelium of healthy nonsmokers (n = 10) and healthy smokers (n = 7). The chromosomal location of the differentially expressed genes was compared to loci identified by GWAS to confer risk for COPD. Smoker BC have 676 genes differentially expressed compared to nonsmoker BC, dominated by smoking up-regulation. Strikingly, 166 (25%) of these genes are located on chromosome 19, with 13 localized to 19q13.2 (p<10(−4) compared to chance), including 4 genes (NFKBIB, LTBP4, EGLN2 and TGFB1) associated with risk for COPD. These observations provide the first direct connection between known genetic risks for smoking-related lung disease and airway BC, the population of lung cells that undergo the earliest changes associated with smoking.
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spelling pubmed-39122032014-02-04 Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2 Ryan, Dorothy M. Vincent, Thomas L. Salit, Jacqueline Walters, Matthew S. Agosto-Perez, Francisco Shaykhiev, Renat Strulovici-Barel, Yael Downey, Robert J. Buro-Auriemma, Lauren J. Staudt, Michelle R. Hackett, Neil R. Mezey, Jason G. Crystal, Ronald G. PLoS One Research Article Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate gene studies have identified a number of risk loci associated with the smoking-related disease COPD, a disorder that originates in the airway epithelium. Since airway basal cell (BC) stem/progenitor cells exhibit the earliest abnormalities associated with smoking (hyperplasia, squamous metaplasia), we hypothesized that smoker BC have a dysregulated transcriptome, enriched, in part, at known GWAS/candidate gene loci. Massive parallel RNA sequencing was used to compare the transcriptome of BC purified from the airway epithelium of healthy nonsmokers (n = 10) and healthy smokers (n = 7). The chromosomal location of the differentially expressed genes was compared to loci identified by GWAS to confer risk for COPD. Smoker BC have 676 genes differentially expressed compared to nonsmoker BC, dominated by smoking up-regulation. Strikingly, 166 (25%) of these genes are located on chromosome 19, with 13 localized to 19q13.2 (p<10(−4) compared to chance), including 4 genes (NFKBIB, LTBP4, EGLN2 and TGFB1) associated with risk for COPD. These observations provide the first direct connection between known genetic risks for smoking-related lung disease and airway BC, the population of lung cells that undergo the earliest changes associated with smoking. Public Library of Science 2014-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3912203/ /pubmed/24498427 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088051 Text en © 2014 Ryan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ryan, Dorothy M.
Vincent, Thomas L.
Salit, Jacqueline
Walters, Matthew S.
Agosto-Perez, Francisco
Shaykhiev, Renat
Strulovici-Barel, Yael
Downey, Robert J.
Buro-Auriemma, Lauren J.
Staudt, Michelle R.
Hackett, Neil R.
Mezey, Jason G.
Crystal, Ronald G.
Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title_full Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title_fullStr Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title_full_unstemmed Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title_short Smoking Dysregulates the Human Airway Basal Cell Transcriptome at COPD Risk Locus 19q13.2
title_sort smoking dysregulates the human airway basal cell transcriptome at copd risk locus 19q13.2
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3912203/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088051
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