Interactions with early-life exposures modulate polygenic risk of wheeze
and asthma in preschool-aged children
Abstract
Background: Asthma is a multifactorial disease with numerous associated
genetic and environmental risk factors, however, gene-environment
interactions are poorly understood in modulating disease risk. This
study determines the polygenic effects of multiple genetic loci and
interactions with environmental exposures during early infancy on risk
of recurrent wheeze and asthma in pre-school aged children. Methods: We
conducted genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and applied a
thresholding method to calculate genetic risk scores (GRS) of recurrent
wheeze and asthma in 2835 children of the CHILD Cohort Study. Recurrent
wheeze was defined as two or more episodes in one year between ages 2-5
years and asthma was diagnosed at age 5 years. In addition, we tested
for interaction effects between the GRS and environmental exposures on
these respiratory outcomes. Results: GWAS identified associations with
known asthma loci on chromosome 17q12 - 17q21 (p < 5e-8). GRS
analysis determined that the weighted addition of alleles at four
childhood-asthma loci correlated with more than 2-fold higher prevalence
of recurrent wheeze (p =1.5e-08) and asthma (p = 9.4e-08) between high
vs. low GRS groups. In addition, the GRS interacts with breastfeeding (p
= 0.02) and traffic air pollution (NO2; p < 0.01) during the
first year of life to modulate risk of recurrent wheeze and
childhood-onset asthma. Conclusions: This study reports polygenic
effects of multiple genetic loci, which interact with early-life
exposures, to determine risk of respiratory outcomes during early
childhood. Thus, asthma risk may be determined early in infancy when
exposures may modulate genetic risk.