BMJ Open Respiratory Research (Jun 2024)

Shared genetic aetiology of respiratory diseases: a genome-wide multitraits association analysis

  • Xiang Wang,
  • Zhe Chen,
  • Cong Li,
  • Ning Gao,
  • Xuanye Wang,
  • Xiangming Chen,
  • YaQi Zeng,
  • Xiahong Yang,
  • Qidong Cai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjresp-2023-002148
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective This study aims to explore the common genetic basis between respiratory diseases and to identify shared molecular and biological mechanisms.Methods This genome-wide pleiotropic association study uses multiple statistical methods to systematically analyse the shared genetic basis between five respiratory diseases (asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, lung cancer and snoring) using the largest publicly available genome wide association studies summary statistics. The missions of this study are to evaluate global and local genetic correlations, to identify pleiotropic loci, to elucidate biological pathways at the multiomics level and to explore causal relationships between respiratory diseases. Data were collected from 27 November 2022 to 30 March 2023 and analysed from 14 April 2023 to 13 July 2023.Main outcomes and measures The primary outcomes are shared genetic loci, pleiotropic genes, biological pathways and estimates of genetic correlations and causal effects.Results Significant genetic correlations were found for 10 paired traits in 5 respiratory diseases. Cross-Phenotype Association identified 12 400 significant potential pleiotropic single-nucleotide polymorphism at 156 independent pleiotropic loci. In addition, multitrait colocalisation analysis identified 15 colocalised loci and a subset of colocalised traits. Gene-based analyses identified 432 potential pleiotropic genes and were further validated at the transcriptome and protein levels. Both pathway enrichment and single-cell enrichment analyses supported the role of the immune system in respiratory diseases. Additionally, five pairs of respiratory diseases have a causal relationship.Conclusions and relevance This study reveals the common genetic basis and pleiotropic genes among respiratory diseases. It provides strong evidence for further therapeutic strategies and risk prediction for the phenomenon of respiratory disease comorbidity.