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Ratios of Acetaminophen Metabolites Identify New Loci of Pharmacogenetic Relevance in a Genome-Wide Association Study.

Gaurav TharejaAnne M EvansSpencer D WoodNisha StephanShaza ZaghloolAnna HalamaGabi KastenmüllerAziz BelkadiOmar M E Albaghanull The Qatar Genome Program Research ConsortiumKarsten Suhre
Published in: Metabolites (2022)
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) with non-targeted metabolomics have identified many genetic loci of biomedical interest. However, metabolites with a high degree of missingness, such as drug metabolites and xenobiotics, are often excluded from such studies due to a lack of statistical power and higher uncertainty in their quantification. Here we propose ratios between related drug metabolites as GWAS phenotypes that can drastically increase power to detect genetic associations between pairs of biochemically related molecules. As a proof-of-concept we conducted a GWAS with 520 individuals from the Qatar Biobank for who at least five of the nine available acetaminophen metabolites have been detected. We identified compelling evidence for genetic variance in acetaminophen glucuronidation and methylation by UGT2A15 and COMT, respectively. Based on the metabolite ratio association profiles of these two loci we hypothesized the chemical structure of one of their products or substrates as being 3-methoxyacetaminophen, which we then confirmed experimentally. Taken together, our study suggests a novel approach to analyze metabolites with a high degree of missingness in a GWAS setting with ratios, and it also demonstrates how pharmacological pathways can be mapped out using non-targeted metabolomics measurements in large population-based studies.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide association study
  • genome wide
  • ms ms
  • genome wide association
  • mass spectrometry
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • cancer therapy
  • copy number
  • case control
  • adverse drug