Authors |
Jeong H. Yun*, Wasay Khan*, Brian Hobbs, Peter Castaldi, Craig Hersh, Peter Miller, Frank Sciurba, Lucas Barwick, Andrew Limper, Kevin Flaherty, Gerard Criner, Kevin Brown, Robert Wise, Fernando Martinez, Edwin K. Silverman, Michael H. Cho+, Alexander Bick+
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Abstract Text |
The lung carries one of the highest somatic mutational loads among tissues in healthy individuals, however whether somatic mutations in the lung are enriched among patients with chronic lung diseases is unknown. We hypothesized that somatic mutations would be increased in smoking-related chronic lung diseases. To identify somatic mutations, we identified somatic single nucleotide variants (SNV) in lung tissue from RNA sequencing paired with blood-derived whole genomes from the Lung Tissue Research Consortium (n=1,364). SNVs were called with GATK MuTect and filtered to a set of 285,000 high confidence mutations. To test for associations with phenotypes, we selected subjects with confirmed histopathology, smoking history, and lung function data which included 29 normal (based on histology and lung function), 352 with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), 164 with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).
Surprisingly, mutational burden (the number of SNVs) was not associated with age or smoking history, overall or within subgroups (P > 0.2). In addition, we did not find significant enrichment for somatic mutations in known lung cancer driver genes. However, we did find mutation burden significantly associated with reduced lung function (forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) % predicted) in COPD (R -0.16, p < 0.01) and IPF (R -0.29, p < 0.001), but not in controls (R -0.069, p = 0.7). In addition, mutation burden was associated with an increased proportion of airway versus alveolar epithelial cells (p <0.001 across all groups). There was no association of mutational burden with immune cell or stromal cell abundance. In multivariable regression analysis adjusted for age, sex, race and smoking history, both airway/alveolar epithelial ratio and lung function (FEV1% predicted) remained statistically significantly associated with mutational burden (Beta 16.7 and -7.27 respectively, p <10-4). Our study suggests that somatic mutations are associated with reduced lung function and cell types with high turnover rate in chronic lung disease.
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