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Himes, Blanca

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Himes

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Blanca

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Himes, Blanca

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  • Publication

    Asthma-susceptibility variants identified using probands in case-control and family-based analyses

    (BioMed Central, 2010) Murphy, Amy J; Soto-Quiros, Manuel E; Avila, Lydiana; Celedón, Juan C; O'Connor, George T; Himes, Blanca; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Wu, Ann; Wilk, Jemma; Hunninghake, Gary; Klanderman, Barbara; Lazarus, Ross; Lange, Christoph; Raby, Benjamin; Silverman, Edwin; Weiss, Scott

    Background: Asthma is a chronic respiratory disease whose genetic basis has been explored for over two decades, most recently via genome-wide association studies. We sought to find asthma-susceptibility variants by using probands from a single population in both family-based and case-control association designs. Methods: We used probands from the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP) in two primary genome-wide association study designs: (1) probands were combined with publicly available population controls in a case-control design, and (2) probands and their parents were used in a family-based design. We followed a two-stage replication process utilizing three independent populations to validate our primary findings. Results: We found that single nucleotide polymorphisms with similar case-control and family-based association results were more likely to replicate in the independent populations, than those with the smallest p-values in either the case-control or family-based design alone. The single nucleotide polymorphism that showed the strongest evidence for association to asthma was rs17572584, which replicated in 2/3 independent populations with an overall p-value among replication populations of 3.5E-05. This variant is near a gene that encodes an enzyme that has been implicated to act coordinately with modulators of Th2 cell differentiation and is expressed in human lung. Conclusions: Our results suggest that using probands from family-based studies in case-control designs, and combining results of both family-based and case-control approaches, may be a way to augment our ability to find SNPs associated with asthma and other complex diseases.

  • Publication

    Comprehensive Genetic Assessment of a Functional TLR9 Promoter Polymorphism: No Replicable Association with Asthma or Asthma-Related Phenotypes

    (BioMed Central, 2011) Avila, Lydiana; Hawrylowicz, Catherine M; Lange, Nancy E; Zhou, Xiaobo; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Himes, Blanca; Lazarus, Ross; Raby, Benjamin; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Soto-Quiros, Manuel; Celedon, Juan C

    Background: Prior studies suggest a role for a variant (rs5743836) in the promoter of toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) in asthma and other inflammatory diseases. We performed detailed genetic association studies of the functional variant rs5743836 with asthma susceptibility and asthma-related phenotypes in three independent cohorts. Methods: rs5743836 was genotyped in two family-based cohorts of children with asthma and a case-control study of adult asthmatics. Association analyses were performed using chi square, family-based and population-based testing. A luciferase assay was performed to investigate whether rs5743836 genotype influences TLR9 promoter activity. Results: Contrary to prior reports, rs5743836 was not associated with asthma in any of the three cohorts. Marginally significant associations were found with FEV1 and FVC (p = 0.003 and p = 0.008, respectively) in one of the family-based cohorts, but these associations were not significant after correcting for multiple comparisons. Higher promoter activity of the CC genotype was demonstrated by luciferase assay, confirming the functional importance of this variant. Conclusion: Although rs5743836 confers regulatory effects on TLR9 transcription, this variant does not appear to be an important asthma-susceptibility locus.

  • Publication

    Integration of Mouse and Human Genome-Wide Association Data Identifies KCNIP4 as an Asthma Gene

    (Public Library of Science, 2013) Sheppard, Keith; Berndt, Annerose; Leme, Adriana S.; Myers, Rachel A.; Gignoux, Christopher R.; Gauderman, W. James; Yang, James J.; Mathias, Rasika A.; Romieu, Isabelle; Torgerson, Dara G.; Roth, Lindsey A.; Huntsman, Scott; Eng, Celeste; Klanderman, Barbara; Ziniti, John; Senter-Sylvia, Jody; Szefler, Stanley J.; Lemanske, Robert F.; Zeiger, Robert S.; Strunk, Robert C.; Martinez, Fernando D.; Boushey, Homer; Chinchilli, Vernon M.; Mauger, David; Koppelman, Gerard H.; Postma, Dirkje S.; Nieuwenhuis, Maartje A. E.; Vonk, Judith M.; Lima, John J.; Irvin, Charles G.; Peters, Stephen P.; Kubo, Michiaki; Tamari, Mayumi; Nakamura, Yusuke; Bleecker, Eugene R.; Meyers, Deborah A.; London, Stephanie J.; Gilliland, Frank D.; Burchard, Esteban G.; Nicolae, Dan L.; Ober, Carole; Paigen, Beverly; Churchill, Gary; Himes, Blanca; Levin, Albert M.; Israel, Elliot; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Tantisira, Kelan; Raby, Benjamin; Barnes, Kathleen C.; Williams, L. Keoki; Demeo, Dawn; Silverman, Edwin; Shapiro, Steve D.; Weiss, Scott

    Asthma is a common chronic respiratory disease characterized by airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR). The genetics of asthma have been widely studied in mouse and human, and homologous genomic regions have been associated with mouse AHR and human asthma-related phenotypes. Our goal was to identify asthma-related genes by integrating AHR associations in mouse with human genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. We used Efficient Mixed Model Association (EMMA) analysis to conduct a GWAS of baseline AHR measures from males and females of 31 mouse strains. Genes near or containing SNPs with EMMA p-values <0.001 were selected for further study in human GWAS. The results of the previously reported EVE consortium asthma GWAS meta-analysis consisting of 12,958 diverse North American subjects from 9 study centers were used to select a subset of homologous genes with evidence of association with asthma in humans. Following validation attempts in three human asthma GWAS (i.e., Sepracor/LOCCS/LODO/Illumina, GABRIEL, DAG) and two human AHR GWAS (i.e., SHARP, DAG), the Kv channel interacting protein 4 (KCNIP4) gene was identified as nominally associated with both asthma and AHR at a gene- and SNP-level. In EVE, the smallest KCNIP4 association was at rs6833065 (P-value 2.9e-04), while the strongest associations for Sepracor/LOCCS/LODO/Illumina, GABRIEL, DAG were 1.5e-03, 1.0e-03, 3.1e-03 at rs7664617, rs4697177, rs4696975, respectively. At a SNP level, the strongest association across all asthma GWAS was at rs4697177 (P-value 1.1e-04). The smallest P-values for association with AHR were 2.3e-03 at rs11947661 in SHARP and 2.1e-03 at rs402802 in DAG. Functional studies are required to validate the potential involvement of KCNIP4 in modulating asthma susceptibility and/or AHR. Our results suggest that a useful approach to identify genes associated with human asthma is to leverage mouse AHR association data.

  • Publication

    Genome-Wide Association Analysis in Asthma Subjects Identifies SPATS2L as a Novel Bronchodilator Response Gene

    (Public Library of Science, 2012) Himes, Blanca; Jiang, Xiaofeng; Hu, Ruoxi; Wu, Ann; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Klanderman, Barbara J.; Ziniti, John; Senter-Sylvia, Jody; Lima, John J.; Irvin, Charles G.; Peters, Stephen P.; Meyers, Deborah A.; Bleecker, Eugene R.; Kubo, Michiaki; Tamari, Mayumi; Nakamura, Yusuke; Szefler, Stanley J.; Lemanske, Robert F.; Zeiger, Robert S.; Strunk, Robert C.; Martinez, Fernando D.; Hanrahan, John P.; Koppelman, Gerard H.; Postma, Dirkje S.; Nieuwenhuis, Maartje A. E.; Vonk, Judith M.; Panettieri, Reynold A.; Markezich, Amy; Israel, Elliot; Carey, Vincent; Tantisira, Kelan; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Lu, Quan; Weiss, Scott

    Bronchodilator response (BDR) is an important asthma phenotype that measures reversibility of airway obstruction by comparing lung function (i.e. FEV1) before and after the administration of a short-acting β2-agonist, the most common rescue medications used for the treatment of asthma. BDR also serves as a test of β2-agonist efficacy. BDR is a complex trait that is partly under genetic control. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of BDR, quantified as percent change in baseline FEV1 after administration of a β2-agonist, was performed with 1,644 non-Hispanic white asthmatic subjects from six drug clinical trials: CAMP, LOCCS, LODO, a medication trial conducted by Sepracor, CARE, and ACRN. Data for 469,884 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were used to measure the association of SNPs with BDR using a linear regression model, while adjusting for age, sex, and height. Replication of primary P-values was attempted in 501 white subjects from SARP and 550 white subjects from DAG. Experimental evidence supporting the top gene was obtained via siRNA knockdown and Western blotting analyses. The lowest overall combined P-value was 9.7E-07 for SNP rs295137, near the SPATS2L gene. Among subjects in the primary analysis, those with rs295137 TT genotype had a median BDR of 16.0 (IQR = [6.2, 32.4]), while those with CC or TC genotypes had a median BDR of 10.9 (IQR = [5.0, 22.2]). SPATS2L mRNA knockdown resulted in increased β2-adrenergic receptor levels. Our results suggest that SPATS2L may be an important regulator of β2-adrenergic receptor down-regulation and that there is promise in gaining a better understanding of the biological mechanisms of differential response to β2-agonists through GWAS.

  • Publication

    Integrated genome-wide association, coexpression network, and expression single nucleotide polymorphism analysis identifies novel pathway in allergic rhinitis

    (BioMed Central, 2014) Bunyavanich, Supinda; Schadt, Eric E; Himes, Blanca; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Qiu, Weiliang; Lazarus, Ross; Ziniti, John P; Cohain, Ariella; Linderman, Michael; Torgerson, Dara G; Eng, Celeste S; Pino-Yanes, Maria; Padhukasahasram, Badri; Yang, James J; Mathias, Rasika A; Beaty, Terri H; Li, Xingnan; Graves, Penelope; Romieu, Isabelle; Navarro, Blanca del Rio; Salam, M Towhid; Vora, Hita; Nicolae, Dan L; Ober, Carole; Martinez, Fernando D; Bleecker, Eugene R; Meyers, Deborah A; Gauderman, W James; Gilliland, Frank; Burchard, Esteban G; Barnes, Kathleen C; Williams, L Keoki; London, Stephanie J; Zhang, Bin; Raby, Benjamin; Weiss, Scott

    Background: Allergic rhinitis is a common disease whose genetic basis is incompletely explained. We report an integrated genomic analysis of allergic rhinitis. Methods: We performed genome wide association studies (GWAS) of allergic rhinitis in 5633 ethnically diverse North American subjects. Next, we profiled gene expression in disease-relevant tissue (peripheral blood CD4+ lymphocytes) collected from subjects who had been genotyped. We then integrated the GWAS and gene expression data using expression single nucleotide (eSNP), coexpression network, and pathway approaches to identify the biologic relevance of our GWAS. Results: GWAS revealed ethnicity-specific findings, with 4 genome-wide significant loci among Latinos and 1 genome-wide significant locus in the GWAS meta-analysis across ethnic groups. To identify biologic context for these results, we constructed a coexpression network to define modules of genes with similar patterns of CD4+ gene expression (coexpression modules) that could serve as constructs of broader gene expression. 6 of the 22 GWAS loci with P-value ≤ 1x10−6 tagged one particular coexpression module (4.0-fold enrichment, P-value 0.0029), and this module also had the greatest enrichment (3.4-fold enrichment, P-value 2.6 × 10−24) for allergic rhinitis-associated eSNPs (genetic variants associated with both gene expression and allergic rhinitis). The integrated GWAS, coexpression network, and eSNP results therefore supported this coexpression module as an allergic rhinitis module. Pathway analysis revealed that the module was enriched for mitochondrial pathways (8.6-fold enrichment, P-value 4.5 × 10−72). Conclusions: Our results highlight mitochondrial pathways as a target for further investigation of allergic rhinitis mechanism and treatment. Our integrated approach can be applied to provide biologic context for GWAS of other diseases.

  • Publication

    Genomewide association between GLCCI1 and response to glucocorticoid therapy in asthma

    (New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM/MMS), 2011) Tantisira, Kelan; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Harada, Michishige; Murphy, Amy; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Himes, Blanca; Lange, Christoph; Lazarus, Ross; Sylvia, Jody; Klanderman, Barbara; Duan, Qing Ling; Qiu, Weiliang; Hirota, Tomomitsu; Martinez, Fernando D.; Mauger, David; Sorkness, Christine; Szefler, Stanley; Lazarus, Stephen C.; Lemanske, Robert F.; Peters, Stephen P.; Lima, John J.; Nakamura, Yusuke; Tamari, Mayumi; Weiss, Scott

    Background: The response to treatment for asthma is characterized by wide interindividual variability, with a significant number of patients who have no response. We hypothesized that a genomewide association study would reveal novel pharmacogenetic determinants of the response to inhaled glucocorticoids. Methods: We analyzed a small number of statistically powerful variants selected on the basis of a family-based screening algorithm from among 534,290 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to determine changes in lung function in response to inhaled glucocorticoids. A significant, replicated association was found, and we characterized its functional effects. Results: We identified a significant pharmacogenetic association at SNP rs37972, replicated in four independent populations totaling 935 persons (P=0.0007), which maps to the glucocorticoid-induced transcript 1 gene (GLCCI1) and is in complete linkage disequilibrium (i.e., perfectly correlated) with rs37973. Both rs37972 and rs37973 are associated with decrements in GLCCI1 expression. In isolated cell systems, the rs37973 variant is associated with significantly decreased luciferase reporter activity. Pooled data from treatment trials indicate reduced lung function in response to inhaled glucocorticoids in subjects with the variant allele (P=0.0007 for pooled data). Overall, the mean (±SE) increase in forced expiratory volume in 1 second in the treated subjects who were homozygous for the mutant rs37973 allele was only about one third of that seen in similarly treated subjects who were homozygous for the wild-type allele (3.2±1.6% vs. 9.4±1.1%), and their risk of a poor response was significantly higher (odds ratio, 2.36; 95% confidence interval, 1.27 to 4.41), with genotype accounting for about 6.6% of overall inhaled glucocorticoid response variability. Conclusions: A functional GLCCI1 variant is associated with substantial decrements in the response to inhaled glucocorticoids in patients with asthma.

  • Publication

    RNA-Seq Transcriptome Profiling Identifies CRISPLD2 as a Glucocorticoid Responsive Gene that Modulates Cytokine Function in Airway Smooth Muscle Cells

    (Public Library of Science, 2014) Himes, Blanca; Jiang, Xiaofeng; Wagner, Peter; Hu, Ruoxi; Wang, Qiyu; Klanderman, Barbara; Whitaker, Reid M.; Duan, Q; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Nikolos, Christina; Jester, William; Johnson, Martin; Panettieri, Reynold A.; Tantisira, Kelan; Weiss, Scott; Lu, Quan

    Asthma is a chronic inflammatory respiratory disease that affects over 300 million people worldwide. Glucocorticoids are a mainstay therapy for asthma because they exert anti-inflammatory effects in multiple lung tissues, including the airway smooth muscle (ASM). However, the mechanism by which glucocorticoids suppress inflammation in ASM remains poorly understood. Using RNA-Seq, a high-throughput sequencing method, we characterized transcriptomic changes in four primary human ASM cell lines that were treated with dexamethasone—a potent synthetic glucocorticoid (1 µM for 18 hours). Based on a Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p-value <0.05, we identified 316 differentially expressed genes, including both well known (DUSP1, KLF15, PER1, TSC22D3) and less investigated (C7, CCDC69, CRISPLD2) glucocorticoid-responsive genes. CRISPLD2, which encodes a secreted protein previously implicated in lung development and endotoxin regulation, was found to have SNPs that were moderately associated with inhaled corticosteroid resistance and bronchodilator response among asthma patients in two previously conducted genome-wide association studies. Quantitative RT-PCR and Western blotting showed that dexamethasone treatment significantly increased CRISPLD2 mRNA and protein expression in ASM cells. CRISPLD2 expression was also induced by the inflammatory cytokine IL1β, and small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of CRISPLD2 further increased IL1β-induced expression of IL6 and IL8. Our findings offer a comprehensive view of the effect of a glucocorticoid on the ASM transcriptome and identify CRISPLD2 as an asthma pharmacogenetics candidate gene that regulates anti-inflammatory effects of glucocorticoids in the ASM.

  • Publication

    ITGB5 and AGFG1 variants are associated with severity of airway responsiveness

    (BioMed Central, 2013) Himes, Blanca; Qiu, Weiliang; Klanderman, Barbara; Ziniti, John; Senter-Sylvia, Jody; Szefler, Stanley J; Lemanske, Jr, Robert F; Zeiger, Robert S; Strunk, Robert C; Martinez, Fernando D; Boushey, Homer; Chinchilli, Vernon M; Israel, Elliot; Mauger, David; Koppelman, Gerard H; Nieuwenhuis, Maartje AE; Postma, Dirkje S; Vonk, Judith M; Rafaels, Nicholas; Hansel, Nadia N; Barnes, Kathleen; Raby, Benjamin; Tantisira, Kelan; Weiss, Scott

    Background: Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), a primary characteristic of asthma, involves increased airway smooth muscle contractility in response to certain exposures. We sought to determine whether common genetic variants were associated with AHR severity. Methods: A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of AHR, quantified as the natural log of the dosage of methacholine causing a 20% drop in FEV1, was performed with 994 non-Hispanic white asthmatic subjects from three drug clinical trials: CAMP, CARE, and ACRN. Genotyping was performed on Affymetrix 6.0 arrays, and imputed data based on HapMap Phase 2, was used to measure the association of SNPs with AHR using a linear regression model. Replication of primary findings was attempted in 650 white subjects from DAG, and 3,354 white subjects from LHS. Evidence that the top SNPs were eQTL of their respective genes was sought using expression data available for 419 white CAMP subjects. Results: The top primary GWAS associations were in rs848788 (P-value 7.2E-07) and rs6731443 (P-value 2.5E-06), located within the ITGB5 and AGFG1 genes, respectively. The AGFG1 result replicated at a nominally significant level in one independent population (LHS P-value 0.012), and the SNP had a nominally significant unadjusted P-value (0.0067) for being an eQTL of AGFG1. Conclusions: Based on current knowledge of ITGB5 and AGFG1, our results suggest that variants within these genes may be involved in modulating AHR. Future functional studies are required to confirm that our associations represent true biologically significant findings.

  • Publication

    Genome-wide association study identifies three new susceptibility loci for adult asthma in the Japanese population

    (Nature Publishing Group, 2011) Hirota, Tomomitsu; Takahashi, Atsushi; Kubo, Michiaki; Tsunoda, Tatsuhiko; Tomita, Kaori; Doi, Satoru; Fujita, Kimie; Miyatake, Akihiko; Enomoto, Tadao; Miyagawa, Takehiko; Adachi, Mitsuru; Tanaka, Hiroshi; Niimi, Akio; Matsumoto, Hisako; Ito, Isao; Masuko, Hironori; Sakamoto, Tohru; Hizawa, Nobuyuki; Taniguchi, Masami; Lima, John J; Irvin, Charles G; Peters, Stephen P; Himes, Blanca; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Tantisira, Kelan; Weiss, Scott; Kamatani, Naoyuki; Nakamura, Yusuke; Tamari, Mayumi
  • Publication

    A genome-wide association study of bronchodilator response in asthmatics

    (Nature Publishing Group, 2013) Duan, Q; Lasky-Su, Jessica; Himes, Blanca; Qiu, Weiliang; Litonjua, Augusto A.; Damask, Amy; Lazarus, Richard; Klanderman, Barbara; Irvin, Charles G.; Peters, Stephen P; Hanrahan, John P; Lima, John J.; Martinez, Fernando D.; Mauger, David; Chinchilli, Vernon M.; Soto-Quiros, Manuel; Avila, Lydiana; Celedón, Juan C.; Lange, Christoph; Weiss, Scott; Tantisira, Kelan

    Reversibility of airway obstruction in response to β2-agonists is highly variable among asthmatics, which is partially attributed to genetic factors. In a genome-wide association study of acute bronchodilator response (BDR) to inhaled albuterol, 534,290 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were tested in 403 white trios from the Childhood Asthma Management Program using five statistical models to determine the most robust genetic associations. The primary replication phase included 1397 polymorphisms in three asthma trials (pooled n=764). The second replication phase tested 13 SNPs in three additional asthma populations (n=241, n=215, and n=592). An intergenic SNP on chromosome 10, rs11252394, proximal to several excellent biological candidates, significantly replicated (p=1.98×10−7) in the primary replication trials. An intronic SNP (rs6988229) in the collagen (COL22A1) locus also provided strong replication signals (p=8.51×10−6). This study applied a robust approach for testing the genetic basis of BDR and identified novel loci associated with this drug response in asthmatics.