Rhinovirus infection of airway epithelial cells uncovers the non-ciliated subset as a likely driver of genetic susceptibility to childhood-onset asthma

Sarah Djeddi, Daniela Fermandez-Salinas, George Huang, Vitor Aguiar, Chitrasen Mohanty, Christina Kendziorski, Steven Gazal, Joshua Boyce, Carole Ober, James Gern, Nora Barrett, Maria Gutierrez-Arcelus
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Abstract

Asthma is a complex disease caused by genetic and environmental factors. Epidemiological studies have shown that in children, wheezing during rhinovirus infection (a cause of the common cold) is associated with asthma development during childhood. This has led scientists to hypothesize there could be a causal relationship between rhinovirus infection and asthma or that RV-induced wheezing identifies individuals at increased risk for asthma development. However, not all children who wheeze when they have a cold develop asthma. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified hundreds of genetic variants contributing to asthma susceptibility, with the vast majority of likely causal variants being non-coding. Integrative analyses with transcriptomic and epigenomic datasets have indicated that T cells drive asthma risk, which has been supported by mouse studies. However, the datasets ascertained in these integrative analyses lack airway epithelial cells. Furthermore, large-scale transcriptomic T cell studies have not identified the regulatory effects of most non-coding risk variants in asthma GWAS, indicating there could be additional cell types harboring these 'missing regulatory effects'. Given that airway epithelial cells are the first line of defense against rhinovirus, we hypothesized they could be mediators of genetic susceptibility to asthma. Here we integrate GWAS data with transcriptomic datasets of airway epithelial cells subject to stimuli that could induce activation states relevant to asthma. We demonstrate that epithelial cultures infected with rhinovirus significantly upregulate childhood-onset asthma-associated genes. We show that this upregulation occurs specifically in non-ciliated epithelial cells. This enrichment for genes in asthma risk loci, or 'asthma heritability enrichment' is also significant for epithelial genes upregulated with influenza infection, but not with SARS-CoV-2 infection or cytokine activation. Additionally, cells from patients with asthma showed a stronger heritability enrichment compared to cells from healthy individuals. Overall, our results suggest that rhinovirus infection is an environmental factor that interacts with genetic risk factors through non-ciliated airway epithelial cells to drive childhood-onset asthma.
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鼻病毒感染气道上皮细胞揭示了非纤毛亚群可能是儿童期哮喘遗传易感性的驱动因素
哮喘是一种由遗传和环境因素引起的复杂疾病。流行病学研究表明,在儿童中,鼻病毒感染(普通感冒的病因之一)引起的喘息与儿童期哮喘的发生有关。科学家们由此推测,鼻病毒感染与哮喘之间可能存在因果关系,或者鼻病毒引起的喘息可识别出哮喘发病风险增加的个体。然而,并不是所有感冒时喘息的儿童都会患上哮喘。全基因组关联研究(GWAS)发现了数百个导致哮喘易感性的基因变异,其中绝大多数可能是非编码变异。转录组和表观基因组数据集的整合分析表明,T 细胞驱动哮喘风险,这已得到小鼠研究的支持。然而,这些整合分析中确定的数据集缺乏气道上皮细胞。此外,大规模的 T 细胞转录组研究并未发现哮喘 GWAS 中大多数非编码风险变异的调控效应,这表明可能还有其他细胞类型存在这些 "缺失的调控效应"。鉴于气道上皮细胞是抵御鼻病毒的第一道防线,我们假设它们可能是哮喘遗传易感性的介导因素。在这里,我们将 GWAS 数据与气道上皮细胞的转录组数据集进行了整合,气道上皮细胞受到的刺激可能会诱发与哮喘相关的活化状态。我们证明,感染鼻病毒的上皮细胞培养物会显著上调儿童期发病的哮喘相关基因。我们发现,这种上调特异性地发生在非纤毛上皮细胞中。这种哮喘风险位点基因的富集,或称 "哮喘遗传性富集",在流感感染时上皮细胞基因上调也很明显,但在 SARS-CoV-2 感染或细胞因子激活时则不明显。此外,与健康人的细胞相比,哮喘患者的细胞表现出更强的遗传富集性。总之,我们的研究结果表明,鼻病毒感染是一种环境因素,它通过非纤毛气道上皮细胞与遗传风险因素相互作用,导致儿童发病型哮喘。
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