GWAS and enrichment analyses of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease identify new trait-associated genes and pathways across eMERGE Network

The eMERGE Network(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Bahram Namjou(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Todd Lingren(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Yongbo Huang(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Sreeja Parameswaran(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Beth L. Cobb(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Ian B. Stanaway(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), John J. Connolly(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Frank Mentch(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Barbara Benoit(Harvard University), Xinnan Niu(Vanderbilt University), Wei‐Qi Wei(Vanderbilt University), Robert J. Carroll(Northwestern University), Jennifer A. Pacheco(Northwestern University), Isaac T. W. Harley(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Senad Divanovic(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), David Carrell(Group Health Cooperative), Eric B. Larson(Geisinger Medical Center), David J. Carey(Geisinger Medical Center), Shefali S. Verma(University of Pennsylvania), Marylyn D. Ritchie(Columbia University), Ali G. Gharavi(Mass General Brigham), Shawn N. Murphy(Mass General Brigham), Marc S. Williams(University of Washington), David R. Crosslin(University of Washington), Gail P. Jarvik(University of Washington Medical Center), Iftikhar J. Kullo(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Håkon Håkonarson(National Institutes of Health), Rongling Li(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Stavra A. Xanthakos(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), John B. Harley(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center)
BMC Medicine
July 17, 2019
Cited by 202Open Access
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Abstract

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a common chronic liver illness with a genetically heterogeneous background that can be accompanied by considerable morbidity and attendant health care costs. The pathogenesis and progression of NAFLD is complex with many unanswered questions. We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWASs) using both adult and pediatric participants from the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network to identify novel genetic contributors to this condition. First, a natural language processing (NLP) algorithm was developed, tested, and deployed at each site to identify 1106 NAFLD cases and 8571 controls and histological data from liver tissue in 235 available participants. These include 1242 pediatric participants (396 cases, 846 controls). The algorithm included billing codes, text queries, laboratory values, and medication records. Next, GWASs were performed on NAFLD cases and controls and case-only analyses using histologic scores and liver function tests adjusting for age, sex, site, ancestry, PC, and body mass index (BMI). Consistent with previous results, a robust association was detected for the PNPLA3 gene cluster in participants with European ancestry. At the PNPLA3-SAMM50 region, three SNPs, rs738409, rs738408, and rs3747207, showed strongest association (best SNP rs738409 p = 1.70 × 10− 20). This effect was consistent in both pediatric (p = 9.92 × 10− 6) and adult (p = 9.73 × 10− 15) cohorts. Additionally, this variant was also associated with disease severity and NAFLD Activity Score (NAS) (p = 3.94 × 10− 8, beta = 0.85). PheWAS analysis link this locus to a spectrum of liver diseases beyond NAFLD with a novel negative correlation with gout (p = 1.09 × 10− 4). We also identified novel loci for NAFLD disease severity, including one novel locus for NAS score near IL17RA (rs5748926, p = 3.80 × 10− 8), and another near ZFP90-CDH1 for fibrosis (rs698718, p = 2.74 × 10− 11). Post-GWAS and gene-based analyses identified more than 300 genes that were used for functional and pathway enrichment analyses. In summary, this study demonstrates clear confirmation of a previously described NAFLD risk locus and several novel associations. Further collaborative studies including an ethnically diverse population with well-characterized liver histologic features of NAFLD are needed to further validate the novel findings.


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