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Metabolomic Associations of Asthma in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.

Yura LeeHan-Yang ChenWei ChenQibin QiMajid AfsharJianwen CaiMartha L DaviglusBharat ThyagarajanKari E NorthStephanie J LondonEric BoerwinkleJuan C CeledónRobert C KaplanBing Yu
Published in: Metabolites (2022)
Asthma disproportionally affects Hispanic and/or Latino backgrounds; however, the relation between circulating metabolites and asthma remains unclear. We conducted a cross-sectional study associating 640 individual serum metabolites, as well as twelve metabolite modules, with asthma in 3347 Hispanic/Latino background participants (514 asthmatics, 15.36%) from the Hispanic/Latino Community Health Study/Study of Latinos. Using survey logistic regression, per standard deviation (SD) increase in 1-arachidonoyl-GPA (20:4) was significantly associated with 32% high odds of asthma after accounting for clinical risk factors ( p = 6.27 × 10 -5 ), and per SD of the green module, constructed using weighted gene co-expression network, was suggestively associated with 25% high odds of asthma ( p = 0.006). In the stratified analyses by sex and Hispanic and/or Latino backgrounds, the effect of 1-arachidonoyl-GPA (20:4) and the green module was predominantly observed in women (OR = 1.24 and 1.37, p < 0.001) and people of Cuban and Puerto-Rican backgrounds (OR = 1.25 and 1.27, p < 0.01). Mutations in Fatty Acid Desaturase 2 ( FADS2 ) affected the levels of 1-arachidonoyl-GPA (20:4), and Mendelian Randomization analyses revealed that high genetically regulated 1-arachidonoyl-GPA (20:4) levels were associated with increased odds of asthma ( p < 0.001). The findings reinforce a molecular basis for asthma etiology, and the potential causal effect of 1-arachidonoyl-GPA (20:4) on asthma provides an opportunity for future intervention.
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