Authors |
Dandi Qiao, Peter G. Miller, Joselyn Rojas-Quintero, Michael C. Honigberg, Adam S. Sperling, Christopher J. Gibson, Alexander G. Bick, Abhishek Niroula, Marie E. McConkey, Brittany Sandoval, Brian C. Miller, Weiwei Shi, Kaushik Viswanathan, Matthew Leventhal, Lillian Werner, Matthew Moll, Brian E. Cade, R. Graham Barr, Adolfo Correa, L. Adrienne Cupples, Sina A. Gharib, Deepti Jain, Stephanie M. Gogarten, Leslie A. Lange, Stephanie J. London, Ani Manichaikul, George T. O’Connor , Elizabeth C. Oelsner, Susan Redline, Stephen S. Rich, Jerome I Rotter, Vasan Ramachandran, Bing Yu, Lynette Sholl, Donna Neuberg, COPDGene Study Investigators, NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Consortium, Siddhartha Jaiswal, Bruce D. Levy5, Caroline A. Owen, Pradeep Natarajan, Edwin K. Silverman, Peter van Galen, Yohannes Tesfaigzi, Michael H. Cho, Benjamin L. Ebert
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Abstract Text |
Background
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with age and smoking, but other determinants of the disease are incompletely understood. Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is a common, age-related state in which somatic mutations in clonal blood populations induce aberrant inflammatory responses. Patients with CHIP have an elevated risk for cardiovascular disease, but the association with COPD remains unclear.
Methods
We analyzed whole-genome and exome sequencing data to detect the presence of CHIP in 48,835 subjects, of whom 8,444 had moderate-to-very-severe COPD. Cases of CHIP were defined based on somatic mutations detected using the sequencing data that are in a pre-specified list of variants predicted or reported to be pathogenic and drivers of myeloid malignancies. The subjects were selected from four separate cohorts with COPD phenotyping and smoking history, including COPDGene, additional TOPMed cohorts, ICGN-EOCOPD study, and UK Biobank. We applied logistic regression and generalized linear mixed effect models to COPD status adjusting for age, gender, sequencing center, number of pack-years, smoking status, and genetic ancestry. Random-effects meta-analyses were conducted to combine the cohorts. As TET2 was commonly mutated in hematopoietic cells, we measured emphysema in murine models in which Tet2 was deleted in hematopoietic cells and performed single cell RNA-sequencing in lung tissues of the Tet2-wildtype and Te2-knockout mice.
Results
In COPDGene, individuals with CHIP had a risk of moderate-to-severe and severe or very severe COPD 1.6 and 2.2 times greater than non-carriers, respectively (adjusted 95% confidence intervals [CI], 1.1 to 2.2 and 1.5 to 3.2). These findings were consistently observed in three additional cohorts and meta-analyses of all subjects. CHIP was also associated with decreased FEV1% predicted in COPDGene (mean between group difference -5.7%; adjusted 95% CI, -8.8 to -2.6), a finding replicated in additional cohorts. Smoke exposure was associated with a small but significant increased risk of having CHIP (OR 1.03 per ten pack-years, 95% CI 1.01-1.05) in the meta-analysis of all subjects. In cigarette smoke exposure models, inactivation of Tet2 in mouse hematopoietic cells enhanced pulmonary inflammation, increased interferon signaling, decreased TGF- signaling, and increased emphysema development.
Conclusions
Age-associated somatic mutations in blood cells are associated with the development and severity of COPD, independent of age and cumulative smoke exposure.
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