PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Different genes interact with particulate matter and tobacco smoke exposure in affecting lung function decline in the general population.

  • Ivan Curjuric,
  • Medea Imboden,
  • Rachel Nadif,
  • Ashish Kumar,
  • Christian Schindler,
  • Margot Haun,
  • Florian Kronenberg,
  • Nino Künzli,
  • Harish Phuleria,
  • Dirkje S Postma,
  • Erich W Russi,
  • Thierry Rochat,
  • Florence Demenais,
  • Nicole M Probst-Hensch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40175

Abstract

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BackgroundOxidative stress related genes modify the effects of ambient air pollution or tobacco smoking on lung function decline. The impact of interactions might be substantial, but previous studies mostly focused on main effects of single genes.ObjectivesWe studied the interaction of both exposures with a broad set of oxidative-stress related candidate genes and pathways on lung function decline and contrasted interactions between exposures.MethodsFor 12679 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), change in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV(1)), FEV(1) over forced vital capacity (FEV(1)/FVC), and mean forced expiratory flow between 25 and 75% of the FVC (FEF(25-75)) was regressed on interval exposure to particulate matter 10% in 3320 SAPALDIA participants without GWAS.ResultsOn the SNP-level, rs2035268 in gene SNCA accelerated FEV(1)/FVC decline by 3.8% (p(interaction) = 2.5×10(-6)), and rs12190800 in PARK2 attenuated FEV1 decline by 95.1 ml p(interaction) = 9.7×10(-8)) over 11 years, while interacting with PM10. Genes and pathways nominally interacting with PM10 and packyears exposure differed substantially. Gene CRISP2 presented a significant interaction with PM10 (p(interaction) = 3.0×10(-4)) on FEV(1)/FVC decline. Pathway interactions were weak. Replications for the strongest SNPs in PARK2 and CRISP2 were not successful.ConclusionsConsistent with a stratified response to increasing oxidative stress, different genes and pathways potentially mediate PM10 and tobacco smoke effects on lung function decline. Ignoring environmental exposures would miss these patterns, but achieving sufficient sample size and comparability across study samples is challenging.