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Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​

Human height is a model polygenic trait with thousands of height-related SNPs identified in GWAS to date. An important determinant of height is the proliferation and hypertrophy of growth plate chondrocytes during childhood long bone elongation. Connecting the expression of specific genes that affec...

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Autores principales: Renthal, Nora Edwards, Nakka, Priyanka, Baronas, John, Kronenberg, Henry M, Hirschhorn, Joel N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090565/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1396
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author Renthal, Nora Edwards
Nakka, Priyanka
Baronas, John
Kronenberg, Henry M
Hirschhorn, Joel N
author_facet Renthal, Nora Edwards
Nakka, Priyanka
Baronas, John
Kronenberg, Henry M
Hirschhorn, Joel N
author_sort Renthal, Nora Edwards
collection PubMed
description Human height is a model polygenic trait with thousands of height-related SNPs identified in GWAS to date. An important determinant of height is the proliferation and hypertrophy of growth plate chondrocytes during childhood long bone elongation. Connecting the expression of specific genes that affect skeletal biology to associated variants in GWAS remains a difficult challenge. To connect the genetics of height and growth plate gene expression, we studied the relationship between gene expression in the murine growth plate and common-variant associations from GWAS of height. To obtain gene expression data from the growth plate, we dissected three layers of murine tibial growth plates, extracted RNA from each layer, and measured expression using the Affymetrix GeneChip 430 3.0. For each gene, we derived a specificity score for each growth plate layer, and SNP-level p-values from a published GWAS of height (N~700000) were combined into gene-level p-values using MAGMA. We then used MAGMA to test for association between specificity of expression for each growth plate layer and the GWAS gene level p-values for height. We found that specificity for the round cell layer is significantly associated with height GWAS p-values (p = 8.5x10(-9)). This association remains when we condition on each of the other cell layers and on membership in a set of genes from OMIM that cause skeletal growth disorders (3.3x10(-8) < p < 4.1x10(-6)). We replicated this result in a RNA-seq dataset of maturing chondrocytes sampled at three time points during development in vitro (days 3, 5, and 10): we found that z-scores for expression in the earliest two days of development are significantly associated with gene-level p-values from height GWAS (p(Day3) = 1.2x10(-21) and p(Day5) = 2.0x10(-20)) and that this association remains after conditioning on the other timepoints and on the OMIM gene set (3.1x10(-20) < p(Day3) < 8.3x10(-5); 3.7x10(-19) < p(Day5) < 0.002). We then performed pathway analysis of genes that are both highly specific to the round layer and highly significant in GWAS using Enrichr. Together, our results suggest that genes expressed in early chondrocyte development (the round cell layer) are particularly relevant to the contribution of growth plate-expressed genes to height. This conclusion both sheds light on the regulation of human skeletal growth and also helps prioritize relevant genes implicated from the height GWAS in skeletal biology.
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spelling pubmed-80905652021-05-05 Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​ Renthal, Nora Edwards Nakka, Priyanka Baronas, John Kronenberg, Henry M Hirschhorn, Joel N J Endocr Soc Pediatric Endocrinology Human height is a model polygenic trait with thousands of height-related SNPs identified in GWAS to date. An important determinant of height is the proliferation and hypertrophy of growth plate chondrocytes during childhood long bone elongation. Connecting the expression of specific genes that affect skeletal biology to associated variants in GWAS remains a difficult challenge. To connect the genetics of height and growth plate gene expression, we studied the relationship between gene expression in the murine growth plate and common-variant associations from GWAS of height. To obtain gene expression data from the growth plate, we dissected three layers of murine tibial growth plates, extracted RNA from each layer, and measured expression using the Affymetrix GeneChip 430 3.0. For each gene, we derived a specificity score for each growth plate layer, and SNP-level p-values from a published GWAS of height (N~700000) were combined into gene-level p-values using MAGMA. We then used MAGMA to test for association between specificity of expression for each growth plate layer and the GWAS gene level p-values for height. We found that specificity for the round cell layer is significantly associated with height GWAS p-values (p = 8.5x10(-9)). This association remains when we condition on each of the other cell layers and on membership in a set of genes from OMIM that cause skeletal growth disorders (3.3x10(-8) < p < 4.1x10(-6)). We replicated this result in a RNA-seq dataset of maturing chondrocytes sampled at three time points during development in vitro (days 3, 5, and 10): we found that z-scores for expression in the earliest two days of development are significantly associated with gene-level p-values from height GWAS (p(Day3) = 1.2x10(-21) and p(Day5) = 2.0x10(-20)) and that this association remains after conditioning on the other timepoints and on the OMIM gene set (3.1x10(-20) < p(Day3) < 8.3x10(-5); 3.7x10(-19) < p(Day5) < 0.002). We then performed pathway analysis of genes that are both highly specific to the round layer and highly significant in GWAS using Enrichr. Together, our results suggest that genes expressed in early chondrocyte development (the round cell layer) are particularly relevant to the contribution of growth plate-expressed genes to height. This conclusion both sheds light on the regulation of human skeletal growth and also helps prioritize relevant genes implicated from the height GWAS in skeletal biology. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8090565/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1396 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Pediatric Endocrinology
Renthal, Nora Edwards
Nakka, Priyanka
Baronas, John
Kronenberg, Henry M
Hirschhorn, Joel N
Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title_full Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title_fullStr Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title_full_unstemmed Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title_short Specificity for the Epiphyseal Round Cell Layer is Significantly Associated With Height GWAS​
title_sort specificity for the epiphyseal round cell layer is significantly associated with height gwas​
topic Pediatric Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090565/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1396
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