Genetic Pleiotropy Between Pulmonary Function and Age-Related Traits: The Long Life Family Study

Author:

Feitosa Mary F1ORCID,Wojczynski Mary K1,Anema Jason A1,Daw E Warwick1,Wang Lihua1,Santanasto Adam J2ORCID,Nygaard Marianne3,Province Michael A1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Statistical Genomics, Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA

2. Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Biodemography, Department of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, Odense C, Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPulmonary function (PF) progressively declines with aging. Forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) are predictors of morbidity of pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases and all-cause mortality. In addition, reduced PF is associated with elevated chronic low-grade systemic inflammation, glucose metabolism, body fatness, and low muscle strength. It may suggest pleiotropic genetic effects between PF with these age-related factors.MethodsWe evaluated whether FEV1 and FVC share common pleiotropic genetic effects with interleukin-6, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, body mass index, muscle (grip) strength, plasma glucose, and glycosylated hemoglobin in 3 888 individuals (age range: 26–106). We employed sex-combined and sex-specific correlated meta-analyses to test whether combining genome-wide association p values from 2 or more traits enhances the ability to detect variants sharing effects on these correlated traits.ResultsWe identified 32 loci for PF, including 29 novel pleiotropic loci associated with PF and (i) body fatness (CYP2U1/SGMS2), (ii) glucose metabolism (CBWD1/DOCK8 and MMUT/CENPQ), (iii) inflammatory markers (GLRA3/HPGD, TRIM9, CALN1, CTNNB1/ZNF621, GATA5/SLCO4A1/NTSR1, and NPVF/C7orf31/CYCS), and (iv) muscle strength (MAL2, AC008825.1/LINC02103, AL136418.1).ConclusionsThe identified genes/loci for PF and age-related traits suggest their underlying shared genetic effects, which can explain part of their phenotypic correlations. Integration of gene expression and genomic annotation data shows enrichment of our genetic variants in lung, blood, adipose, pancreas, and muscles, among others. Our findings highlight the critical roles of identified gene/locus in systemic inflammation, glucose metabolism, strength performance, PF, and pulmonary disease, which are involved in accelerated biological aging.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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