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Integrative Assessment of Chlorine-Induced Acute Lung Injury in Mice

Authors
Leikauf, George D.Pope-Varsalona, HannahConcel, Vincent J.Liu, PengyuanBein, KiflaiBerndt, AnneroseMartin, Timothy M.Ganguly, KoustavJang, An SooBrant, Kelly A.Dopico, Richard A., Jr.Upadhyay, SwapnaDi, Y. P. PeterLi, QianHu, ZhenVuga, Louis J.Medvedovic, MarioKaminski, NaftaliYou, MingAlexander, Danny C.McDunn, Jonathan E.Prows, Daniel R.Knoell, Daren L.Fabisiak, James P.
Issue Date
Aug-2012
Publisher
American Lung Association
Keywords
ARDS; countermeasures; glutamine; genetics; metabolomics
Citation
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, v.47, no.2, pp 234 - 244
Pages
11
Journal Title
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
Volume
47
Number
2
Start Page
234
End Page
244
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/14995
DOI
10.1165/rcmb.2012-0026OC
ISSN
1044-1549
1535-4989
Abstract
The genetic basis for the underlying individual susceptibility to chlorine-induced acute lung injury is unknown. To uncover the genetic basis and pathophysiological processes that could provide additional homeostatic capacities during lung injury, 40 inbred murine strains were exposed to chlorine, and haplotype association mapping was performed. The identified single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations were evaluated through transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling. Using >= 10% allelic frequency and >= 10% phenotype explained as threshold criteria, promoter SNPs that could eliminate putative transcriptional factor recognition sites in candidate genes were assessed by determining transcript levels through microarray and reverse real-time PCR during chlorine exposure. The mean survival time varied by approximately 5-fold among strains, and SNP associations were identified for 13 candidate genes on chromosomes 1, 4, 5, 9, and 15. Microarrays revealed several differentially enriched pathways, including protein transport (decreased more in the sensitive C57BLKS/J lung) and protein catabolic process (increased more in the resistant C57BL/10J lung). Lung metabolomic profiling revealed 95 of the 280 metabolites measured were altered by chlorine exposure, and included alanine, which decreased more in the C57BLKS/J than in the C57BL/10J strain, and glutamine, which increased more in the C57BL/10J than in the C57BLKS/J strain. Genetic associations from haplotype mapping were strengthened by an integrated assessment using transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling. The leading candidate genes associated with increased susceptibility to acute lung injury in mice included Klf4, Sema7a, Tns1, Aacs, and a gene that encodesan amino acid carrier, Slc38a4.
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