BMC Nephrology (Jul 2020)

Genetic variation implicates plasma angiopoietin-2 in the development of acute kidney injury sub-phenotypes

  • Pavan K. Bhatraju,
  • Max Cohen,
  • Ryan J. Nagao,
  • Eric D. Morrell,
  • Susanna Kosamo,
  • Xin-Ya Chai,
  • Robin Nance,
  • Victoria Dmyterko,
  • Joseph Delaney,
  • Jason D. Christie,
  • Kathleen D. Liu,
  • Carmen Mikacenic,
  • Sina A. Gharib,
  • W. Conrad Liles,
  • Ying Zheng,
  • David C. Christiani,
  • Jonathan Himmelfarb,
  • Mark M. Wurfel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-020-01935-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background We previously identified two acute kidney injury (AKI) sub-phenotypes (AKI-SP1 and AKI-SP2) with different risk of poor clinical outcomes and response to vasopressor therapy. Plasma biomarkers of endothelial dysfunction (tumor necrosis factor receptor-1, angiopoietin-1 and 2) differentiated the AKI sub-phenotypes. However, it is unknown whether these biomarkers are simply markers or causal mediators in the development of AKI sub-phenotypes. Methods We tested for associations between single-nucleotide polymorphisms within the Angiopoietin-1, Angiopoietin-2, and Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor 1A genes and AKI- SP2 in 421 critically ill subjects of European ancestry. Top performing single-nucleotide polymorphisms (FDR T, near ANGPT2 was associated with reduced risk of AKI-SP2 (odds ratio, 0.45; 95% CI, 0.31–0.66; adjusted FDR = 0.003) and decreased plasma angiopoietin-2 (p = 0.002). Causal inference analysis showed that for each minor allele (T) the risk of developing AKI-SP2 decreases by 16%. Plasma angiopoietin-2 mediated 41.5% of the rs2920656 related risk for AKI-SP2. Human kidney microvascular endothelial cells carrying the T allele of rs2920656 produced numerically lower levels of angiopoietin-2 although this was not statistically significant (p = 0.07). Finally, analyses demonstrated that angiopoietin-2 is minimally renally cleared in critically ill subjects. Conclusion Genetic mediation analysis provides supportive evidence that angiopoietin-2 plays a causal role in risk for AKI-SP2.

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