Login / Signup

SNPs in FAM13A and IL2RB genes are associated with FeNO in adult subjects with asthma.

Simone AccordiniValentina LandoLucia CalcianoCristina BombieriGiovanni MalerbaAntonino MargagliottiCosetta MinelliJames PottsDiana A van der PlaatMario Olivieri
Published in: Journal of breath research (2023)
Nitric oxide has different roles in asthma as both an endogenous modulator of airway function and a pro-inflammatory mediator. Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) is a reliable, quantitative, non-invasive, simple, and safe biomarker for assessing airways inflammation in asthma. Previous genome-wide and genetic association studies have shown that different genes and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are linked to FeNO. We aimed at identifying SNPs in candidate genes or gene regions that are associated with FeNO in asthma. We evaluated 264 asthma cases (median age 42.8 years, female 47.7%) who had been identified in the general adult population within the Gene Environment Interactions in Respiratory Diseases survey in Verona (Italy; 2008-2010). Two hundred and twenty-one tag-SNPs, which are representative of 50 candidate genes, were genotyped by a custom GoldenGate Genotyping Assay. A two-step association analysis was performed without assuming an a priori genetic model: step 1) a machine learning technique [Gradient Boosting Machine (GBM)] was used to select the 15 SNPs with the highest variable importance measure; step 2) the GBM-selected SNPs were jointly tested in a linear regression model with natural log-transformed FeNO as the normally distributed outcome and with age, sex, and the SNPs as covariates. We replicated our results within an independent sample of 296 patients from the European Community Respiratory Health Survey III. We found that SNP rs987314 in family with sequence similarity 13 member A ( FAM13A ) and SNP rs3218258 in interleukin 2 receptor subunit beta ( IL2RB ) gene regions are significantly associated with FeNO in adult subjects with asthma. These genes are involved in different mechanisms that affect smooth muscle constriction and endothelial barrier function responses ( FAM13A ), or in immune response processes ( IL2RB ). Our findings contribute to the current knowledge on FeNO in asthma by identifying two novel SNPs associated with this biomarker of airways inflammation.
Keyphrases