Genome-wide analyses of 200,453 individuals yield new insights into the causes and consequences of clonal hematopoiesis.
Siddhartha P KarPedro M QuirosMuxin GuTao JiangJonathan MitchellRyan LangdonVivek IyerClea BarcenaM S VijayabaskarMargarete A FabrePaul CarterSlavé PetrovskiStephen BurgessGeorge S VassiliouPublished in: Nature genetics (2022)
Clonal hematopoiesis (CH), the clonal expansion of a blood stem cell and its progeny driven by somatic driver mutations, affects over a third of people, yet remains poorly understood. Here we analyze genetic data from 200,453 UK Biobank participants to map the landscape of inherited predisposition to CH, increasing the number of germline associations with CH in European-ancestry populations from 4 to 14. Genes at new loci implicate DNA damage repair (PARP1, ATM, CHEK2), hematopoietic stem cell migration/homing (CD164) and myeloid oncogenesis (SETBP1). Several associations were CH-subtype-specific including variants at TCL1A and CD164 that had opposite associations with DNMT3A- versus TET2-mutant CH, the two most common CH subtypes, proposing key roles for these two loci in CH development. Mendelian randomization analyses showed that smoking and longer leukocyte telomere length are causal risk factors for CH and that genetic predisposition to CH increases risks of myeloproliferative neoplasia, nonhematological malignancies, atrial fibrillation and blood epigenetic ageing.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- room temperature
- dna damage
- dna methylation
- stem cells
- copy number
- atrial fibrillation
- dna repair
- cell migration
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- electronic health record
- high grade
- coronary artery disease
- bone marrow
- left ventricular
- single cell
- machine learning
- acute coronary syndrome
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- artificial intelligence
- peripheral blood
- deep learning
- cross sectional
- dna damage response