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Gene-environment interaction affects risk of atopic eczema: population and in vitro studies

Gene-environment interaction affects risk of atopic eczema: population and in vitro studies
Gene-environment interaction affects risk of atopic eczema: population and in vitro studies

Background: multiple environmental and genetic factors play a role in the pathogenesis of atopic eczema (AE). We aimed to investigate gene–environment interactions (G × E) to improve understanding of the pathophysiology. 

Methods: we analysed data from 16 European studies to test for interaction between the 24 most significant AE-associated loci identified from genome-wide association studies and 18 early-life environmental factors. We tested for replication using a further 10 studies and in vitro modeling to independently assess findings. 


Results: the discovery analysis (including 25,339 individuals) showed suggestive evidence for interaction (p < 0.05) between seven environmental factors (antibiotic use, cat ownership, dog ownership, breastfeeding, elder sibling, smoking and washing practices) and at least one established variant for AE, 14 interactions in total. In the replication analysis (254,532 individuals) dog exposure × rs10214237 (on chromosome 5p13.2 near IL7R) was nominally significant (OR interaction = 0.91 [0.83–0.99] p = 0.025), with a risk effect of the T allele observed only in those not exposed to dogs. A similar interaction with rs10214237 was observed for siblings in the discovery analysis (OR interaction = 0.84 [0.75–0.94] p = 0.003), but replication analysis was under-powered (OR interaction = 1.09 [0.82–1.46]). rs10214237 homozygous risk genotype is associated with lower IL-7R expression in human keratinocytes, and dog exposure modelled in vitro showed a differential response according to rs10214237 genotype. 

Conclusion: interaction analysis and functional assessment provide preliminary evidence that early-life dog exposure may modify the genetic effect of rs10214237 on AE via IL7R, supporting observational epidemiology showing a protective effect for dog ownership. The lack of evidence for other G × E studied here implies only weak effects are likely to occur.

atopic eczema, dog, environment, gene, interaction
0105-4538
Standl, Marie
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Budu-Aggrey, Ashley
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Johnston, Luke J.
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Holloway, John W.
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Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
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Løset, Mari
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Mason, Dan
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Melbye, Mads
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Melén, Erik
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Minica, Camelia
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Murray, Clare S.
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Nijsten, Tamar
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Rinnov, Maria R.
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UK Translational Research Network in Dermatology
Standl, Marie
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Budu-Aggrey, Ashley
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Johnston, Luke J.
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Elias, Martina S.
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Arshad, S. Hasan
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Bager, Peter
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Bataille, Veronique
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Blakeway, Helena
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Bønnelykke, Klaus
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Boomsma, Dorret
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Herrera-Luis, Esther
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Hu, Chen
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Hveem, Kristian
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Kress, Sara
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Løset, Mari
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Marenholz, Ingo
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Mason, Dan
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Melén, Erik
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Minica, Camelia
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Murray, Clare S.
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Nijsten, Tamar
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Rinnov, Maria R.
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Standl, Marie, Budu-Aggrey, Ashley and Johnston, Luke J. , UK Translational Research Network in Dermatology (2025) Gene-environment interaction affects risk of atopic eczema: population and in vitro studies. Allergy. (doi:10.1111/all.16605).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: multiple environmental and genetic factors play a role in the pathogenesis of atopic eczema (AE). We aimed to investigate gene–environment interactions (G × E) to improve understanding of the pathophysiology. 

Methods: we analysed data from 16 European studies to test for interaction between the 24 most significant AE-associated loci identified from genome-wide association studies and 18 early-life environmental factors. We tested for replication using a further 10 studies and in vitro modeling to independently assess findings. 


Results: the discovery analysis (including 25,339 individuals) showed suggestive evidence for interaction (p < 0.05) between seven environmental factors (antibiotic use, cat ownership, dog ownership, breastfeeding, elder sibling, smoking and washing practices) and at least one established variant for AE, 14 interactions in total. In the replication analysis (254,532 individuals) dog exposure × rs10214237 (on chromosome 5p13.2 near IL7R) was nominally significant (OR interaction = 0.91 [0.83–0.99] p = 0.025), with a risk effect of the T allele observed only in those not exposed to dogs. A similar interaction with rs10214237 was observed for siblings in the discovery analysis (OR interaction = 0.84 [0.75–0.94] p = 0.003), but replication analysis was under-powered (OR interaction = 1.09 [0.82–1.46]). rs10214237 homozygous risk genotype is associated with lower IL-7R expression in human keratinocytes, and dog exposure modelled in vitro showed a differential response according to rs10214237 genotype. 

Conclusion: interaction analysis and functional assessment provide preliminary evidence that early-life dog exposure may modify the genetic effect of rs10214237 on AE via IL7R, supporting observational epidemiology showing a protective effect for dog ownership. The lack of evidence for other G × E studied here implies only weak effects are likely to occur.

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Allergy - 2025 - Standl - Gene Environment Interaction Affects Risk of Atopic Eczema Population and In Vitro Studies - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 May 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 June 2025
Keywords: atopic eczema, dog, environment, gene, interaction

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503068
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503068
ISSN: 0105-4538
PURE UUID: d4608c1a-2843-42d0-8d44-e7a845922f05
ORCID for John W. Holloway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9998-0464
ORCID for Ramesh J. Kurukulaaratchy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1588-2400

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Jul 2025 16:41
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:45

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Contributors

Author: Marie Standl
Author: Ashley Budu-Aggrey
Author: Luke J. Johnston
Author: Martina S. Elias
Author: S. Hasan Arshad
Author: Peter Bager
Author: Veronique Bataille
Author: Helena Blakeway
Author: Klaus Bønnelykke
Author: Dorret Boomsma
Author: Ben M. Brumpton
Author: Mariona Bustamante Pineda
Author: Archie Campbell
Author: John A. Curtin
Author: Anders Eliasen
Author: João P.S. Fadista
Author: Bjarke Feenstra
Author: Trine Gerner
Author: Carolina Medina-Gomez
Author: Sarah Grosche
Author: Kristine B. Gutzkow
Author: Anne-Sofie Halling
Author: Caroline Hayward
Author: John Henderson
Author: Esther Herrera-Luis
Author: Joukejan Hottenga
Author: Jonathan O'B Hourihane
Author: Chen Hu
Author: Kristian Hveem
Author: Amaia Irizar
Author: Benedicte Jacquemi
Author: Leon Jessen
Author: Sara Kress
Author: Susanne Lau
Author: Sabrina Llop
Author: Mari Løset
Author: Ingo Marenholz
Author: Dan Mason
Author: Daniel L. McCartney
Author: Mads Melbye
Author: Erik Melén
Author: Camelia Minica
Author: Clare S. Murray
Author: Tamar Nijsten
Author: Luba M. Pardo
Author: Suzanne Pasmans
Author: Craig E. Pennell
Author: Maria R. Rinnov
Corporate Author: UK Translational Research Network in Dermatology

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