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Haplotype Association Mapping of Acute Lung Injury in Mice Implicates Activin A Receptor, Type 1

Authors
Leikauf, George D.Concel, Vincent J.Liu, PengyuanBein, KiflaiBerndt, AnneroseGanguly, KoustavJang, An SooBrant, Kelly A.Dietsch, MaggiePope-Varsalona, HannahDopico, Richard A., Jr.Di, Y. P. PeterLi, QianVuga, Louis J.Medvedovic, MarioKaminski, NaftaliYou, MingProws, Daniel R.
Issue Date
1-Jun-2011
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
Keywords
acute respiratory distress syndrome; smoke inhalation; carboxyl stress; transforming growth factor-&beta signaling; ubiquitination
Citation
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, v.183, no.11, pp 1499 - 1509
Pages
11
Journal Title
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Volume
183
Number
11
Start Page
1499
End Page
1509
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/16401
DOI
10.1164/rccm.201006-0912OC
ISSN
1073-449X
1535-4970
Abstract
Rationale: Because acute lung injury is a sporadic disease produced by heterogeneous precipitating factors, previous genetic analyses are mainly limited to candidate gene case-control studies. Objectives: To develop a genome-wide strategy in which single nucleotide polymorphism associations are assessed for functional consequences to survival during acute lung injury in mice. Methods: To identify genes associated with acute lung injury, 40 inbred strains were exposed to acrolein and haplotype association mapping, microarray, and DNA-protein binding were assessed. Measurements and Main Results: The mean survival time varied among mouse strains with polar strains differing approximately 2.5-fold. Associations were identified on chromosomes 1, 2, 4, 11, and 12. Seven genes (Acvr1, Cacnb4, Ccdc148, Galnt13, Rfwd2, Rpap2, and Tgfbr3) had single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations within the gene. Because SNP associations may encompass "blocks'' of associated variants, functional assessment was performed in 91 genes within +/- 1 Mbp of each SNP association. Using 10% or greater allelic frequency and 10% or greater phenotype explained as threshold criteria, 16 genes were assessed by microarray and reverse real-time polymerase chain reaction. Microarray revealed several enriched pathways including transforming growth factor-beta signaling. Transcripts for Acvr1, Arhgap15, Cacybp, Rfwd2, and Tgfbr3 differed between the strains with exposure and contained SNPs that could eliminate putative transcriptional factor recognition sites. Ccdc148, Fancl, and Tnn had sequence differences that could produce an amino acid substitution. Mycn and Mgat4a had a promoter SNP or 3'untranslated region SNPs, respectively. Several genes were related and encoded receptors (ACVR1, TGFBR3), transcription factors (MYCN, possibly CCDC148), and ubiquitin-proteasome (RFWD2, FANCL, CACYBP) proteins that can modulate cell signaling. An Acvr1 SNP eliminated a putative ELK1 binding site and diminished DNA-protein binding. Conclusions: Assessment of genetic associations can be strengthened using a genetic/genomic approach. This approach identified several candidate genes, including Acvr1, associated with increased susceptibility to acute lung injury in mice.
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