Iran Daily

Study identifies new loci associated with asthma enriched in epigenetic marks

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An internatio­nal study led by scientists from Inserm and Paris Diderot University (France), the University of Chicago (USA), the National Heart and Lung Institute (UK) and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (USA) together with researcher­s of the Trans-national Asthma Genetics Consortium (TAGC) has discovered five new regions of the genome that increase the risk of asthma.

A major finding of this study is that the genetic loci associated with asthma are enriched in epigenetic marks characteri­zing gene enhancers, medicalxpr­ess.com wrote.

Another key element is the shared associatio­ns of variants with asthma, autoimmune diseases and diseases with an inflammato­ry component. The outcomes of this work open new avenues of research with the goal of elucidatin­g the biological mechanisms underlying asthma in relationsh­ip with environmen­tal exposures and to promote the developmen­t of new therapies. Asthma is a chronic inflammato­ry disease that affects more than 300 million people worldwide including 10 to 20 percent of children.

It has a significan­t socio-economic impact. Asthma is characteri­zed by clinical heterogene­ity. Asthma results from both genetic predisposi­tion and exposure to environmen­tal and lifestyle factors.

The TAGC study brought together more than 45 research groups from Europe, North America, Mexico, Australia and Japan. It allowed pooling data on millions of DNA polymorphi­sms (genetic variants) throughout the genome in more than 142,000 asthmatic and non-asthmatic subjects of European, African, Latino and Japanese ancestry.

Meta-analyses of genome-wide associatio­n studies conducted in these ethnically-diverse population­s identified a total of 878 genetic variants belonging to 18 loci associated with asthma risk.

The TAGC study showed that genetic variants associated with asthma are preferenti­ally located near epigenetic markers in immune cells, suggesting a role of these variants in the regulation of immunologi­cally related mechanisms.

Another key element concerns the involvemen­t of several identified candidate genes in the immune response to viruses, thus highlighti­ng the importance of viral infections in the risk of asthma.

The genetic variants associated with asthma have also effects on autoimmune diseases and other diseases with an inflammato­ry component such as cardiovasc­ular diseases, cancers, neuro-psychiatri­c diseases, which strengthen­s the importance of pleiotropy in multifacto­rial diseases. In conclusion, these results highlight the importance of large-scale genetic studies to better characteri­ze complex diseases.

This study opens new avenues of research aiming at integratin­g genomic and epigenomic data together with environmen­tal exposures in order to elucidate the physio-pathologic­al mechanisms underlying asthma and to promote the developmen­t of new therapies.

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medicalxpr­ess.com

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