Author:
Wen Sean,Kuri-Morales Pablo,Hu Fengyuan,Nag Abhishek,Tachmazidou Ioanna,Vishnu Vardhan Deevi Sri,Taiy Haeyam,Smith Katherine,Loesch Douglas P.,Burren Oliver S.,Dhindsa Ryan S.,Wasilewski Sebastian,Alegre-Díaz Jesus,Berumen Jaime,Emberson Jonathan,Torres Jason M.,Collins Rory,Carss Keren,Wang Quanli,Petrovski Slavé,Tapia-Conyer Roberto,Fabre Margarete A.,Harper Andrew R.,Vassiliou George,Mitchell Jonathan
Abstract
AbstractThe development of clonal haematopoiesis (CH), the age-related expansion of mutated haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) clones, is influenced by genetic and non-genetic factors. To date, large-scale studies of CH have focused on individuals of European descent, such that the impact of genetic ancestry on CH development remains incompletely understood. Here, we investigate this by studying CH in 136,401 admixed participants from the Mexico City Prospective Study (MCPS) and 419,228 European participants from the UK Biobank (UKB). We observe that CH was significantly less common in MCPS compared to UKB (adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 0.56 [95% Cl = 0.55-0.59],P= 1.60 x 10-206), a difference that persisted when comparing MCPS participants whose genomes were >50% ancestrally Indigenous American to those whose genomes were >50% ancestrally European (adjusted OR = 0.76 [0.70-0.83],P= 1.78 x 10-10). Genome- and exome-wide association analyses in MCPS participants identified two novel loci associated with CH (CSGALNACT1andDIAPH3), and ancestry-specific variants in theTCL1Blocus with opposing effect onDNMT3A-versus non-DNMT3A-CH. Meta-analysis of the MCPS and UKB cohorts identified another five novel loci associated with overall or gene specific CH, including polymorphisms atPAPR11/CCND2,MEIS1andUBE2G1/SPNS3. Our CH study, the largest in a non-European population to date, demonstrates the profound impact of ancestry on CH development and reveals the power of cross-ancestry comparisons to derive novel insights into CH pathogenesis and advance health equity amongst different human populations.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory