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    The severity of bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) is a fundamental feature of asthma. The severity of BHR varies between asthmatics and is associated with lack of asthma control. The mechanisms underlying this trait are still unclear. This study aimed to identify genes associated with BHR severity, using a genomewide association study (GWAS) on the slope of BHR in adult asthmatics. We performed a GWAS on BHR severity in adult asthmatics from the Dutch Asthma GWAS cohort (n = 650), adjusting for smoking and inhaled corticosteroid use, and verified results in three other cohorts. Furthermore, we performed eQTL and co-expression analyses in lung tissue. In the discovery cohort, one genomewide significant hit located in phosphodiesterase 4D, cAMP-specif (PDE4D) and 26 SNPs with P-values < 1*10-5 were found. None of our findings replicated in adult and childhood replication cohorts jointly. In adult cohorts separately, rs1344110 in pituitary tumour-transforming 1 interacting protein (PTTG1IP) and rs345983 in Mastermind-like 3 (MAML3) replicated nominally; minor alleles of rs345983 and rs1344110 were associated with less severe BHR and higher lung tissue gene expression. PTTG1IP showed significant co-expression with pituitary tumour-transforming 1, the binding factor of PTTG1lP, and with vimentin and E-cadherin1. MAML3 co-expressed significantly with Mastermind-like 2 (MAML2), both involved in Notch signalling. PTTG1IP and MAML3 are associated with BHR severity in adult asthma. The relevance of these genes is supported by the eQTL analyses and co-expression of PTTG1lP with vimentin and E-cadherin1, and MAML3 with MAML2. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Citation

    M A E Nieuwenhuis, J M Vonk, B E Himes, C Sarnowski, C Minelli, D Jarvis, E Bouzigon, D C Nickle, M Laviolette, D Sin, S T Weiss, M van den Berge, G H Koppelman, D S Postma. PTTG1IP and MAML3, novel genomewide association study genes for severity of hyperresponsiveness in adult asthma. Allergy. 2017 May;72(5):792-801


    PMID: 27709636

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