Integrated Functional Genomic Analysis Enables Annotation of Kidney Genome-Wide Association Study Loci

Author:

Sieber Karsten B.,Batorsky Anna,Siebenthall Kyle,Hudkins Kelly L.,Vierstra Jeff D.,Sullivan Shawn,Sur Aakash,McNulty Michelle,Sandstrom Richard,Reynolds Alex,Bates Daniel,Diegel Morgan,Dunn Douglass,Nelson Jemma,Buckley Michael,Kaul Rajinder,Sampson Matthew G.,Himmelfarb Jonathan,Alpers Charles E.,Waterworth Dawn,Akilesh Shreeram

Abstract

BackgroundLinking genetic risk loci identified by genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to their causal genes remains a major challenge. Disease-associated genetic variants are concentrated in regions containing regulatory DNA elements, such as promoters and enhancers. Although researchers have previously published DNA maps of these regulatory regions for kidney tubule cells and glomerular endothelial cells, maps for podocytes and mesangial cells have not been available.MethodsWe generated regulatory DNA maps (DNase-seq) and paired gene expression profiles (RNA-seq) from primary outgrowth cultures of human glomeruli that were composed mainly of podocytes and mesangial cells. We generated similar datasets from renal cortex cultures, to compare with those of the glomerular cultures. Because regulatory DNA elements can act on target genes across large genomic distances, we also generated a chromatin conformation map from freshly isolated human glomeruli.ResultsWe identified thousands of unique regulatory DNA elements, many located close to transcription factor genes, which the glomerular and cortex samples expressed at different levels. We found that genetic variants associated with kidney diseases (GWAS) and kidney expression quantitative trait loci were enriched in regulatory DNA regions. By combining GWAS, epigenomic, and chromatin conformation data, we functionally annotated 46 kidney disease genes.ConclusionsWe demonstrate a powerful approach to functionally connect kidney disease-/trait–associated loci to their target genes by leveraging unique regulatory DNA maps and integrated epigenomic and genetic analysis. This process can be applied to other kidney cell types and will enhance our understanding of genome regulation and its effects on gene expression in kidney disease.

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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