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Genetic characterization of preschool wheeze phenotypes

Genetic characterization of preschool wheeze phenotypes
Genetic characterization of preschool wheeze phenotypes

Background: preschool wheeze is a heterogenous and poorly understood clinical syndrome. As a result, current treatments are insufficient, and prevention is not possible. 

Objective: we sought to increase understanding of the genetic susceptibility and underlying disease mechanisms of wheeze phenotypes in early childhood through large-scale genome-wide association study analyses. 

Methods: we performed meta-analyses of genome-wide association study on early-onset wheeze, defined as recurrent wheeze or asthma in the first 3 years of life, and its subtypes, including early transient and persistent wheeze, defined by asthma/wheeze at age 3 and subsequent remission or persistence at age 6, respectively. The discovery analyses included data on more than 13,000 children from 15 cohorts; replication was sought through meta-analyses of data from 7 additional cohorts including up to 5000 children. Genetic variants associated with asthma-related traits in adulthood (adult asthma, atopy, eosinophils, and lung function) were used to quantify the degree to which genetic risk influencing asthma-related adult traits also influences genetic risk of preschool wheeze. 

Results: variants near the GSDMB gene in the 17q region showed genome-wide significant association with early-onset wheeze (rs2305480; odds ratio [95% confidence interval] = 1.26 [1.17-1.33], P = 2.30E-16) and persistent wheeze (rs11078926; 1.43 [1.30-1.578], P = 2.14E-11), but not with early transient wheeze (rs1054609; 1.08 [0.98-1.18], P = .094). Other known asthma loci were associated with early-onset wheeze, particularly CDHR3. Additionally, increased genetic risk to early-onset wheeze was associated with genetic risk for asthma at older ages, atopy, eosinophil count, and lower adult lung function. This was driven by persistent wheeze, whereas transient early wheeze was only associated with low lung function. 

Conclusions: preschool wheeze phenotypes displayed distinct patterns of single nucleotide polymorphism associations and genetic enrichment with asthma-related traits. These results indicate distinct etiologies of wheeze phenotypes, which could inform studies in optimization of prevention and treatment strategies.

17q21-12, asthma comorbidities, genetic overlap, genome-wide association study, Preschool wheeze
0091-6749
Fischer-Rasmussen, Kasper
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Granell, Raquel
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Eliasen, Anders Ulrik
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Kreiner, Eskil
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Tingskov Pedersen, Casper-Emil
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Luo, Yang
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Chawes, Bo
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Stokholm, Jakob
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Malby Schoos, Ann-Marie
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Siroux, Valérie
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Heinrich, Joachim
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Standl, Marie
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Simpson, Angela
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Murray, Clare
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Jacobsson, Bo
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Myhre, Ronny
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Pennell, Craig E.
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Daley, Denise
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Ober, Carole
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Gern, James E.
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Boomsma, Dorret I.
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Hottenga, Jouke-Jan
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Abdellaoui, Abdel
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Holloway, John W.
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Turner, Stephen
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Arshad, S. Hasan
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Ullah, Anhar
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Melén, Erik
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Henderson, John
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Bisgaard, Hans
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Pedersen, Anders Gorm
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Custovic, Adnan
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Vonk, Judith M.
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Koppelman, Gerard H.
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Kabesch, Michael
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Bønnelykke, Klaus
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GABRIEL consortium, the EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology (EAGLE) Consortium
Fischer-Rasmussen, Kasper
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Granell, Raquel
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Eliasen, Anders Ulrik
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Kreiner, Eskil
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Tingskov Pedersen, Casper-Emil
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Luo, Yang
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Chawes, Bo
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Stokholm, Jakob
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Malby Schoos, Ann-Marie
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Kumar, Ashish
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Nybo Andersen, Anne-Marie
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Feenstra, Bjarke
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Geller, Frank
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Siroux, Valérie
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Demenais, Florence
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Bouzigon, Emmanuelle
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Jaddoe, Vincent
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Sunyer, Jordi
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Guxens, Mónica
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Standl, Marie
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Simpson, Angela
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Murray, Clare
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Jacobsson, Bo
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Myhre, Ronny
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Daley, Denise
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Ober, Carole
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Gern, James E.
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Boomsma, Dorret I.
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Hottenga, Jouke-Jan
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Abdellaoui, Abdel
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Holloway, John W.
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Turner, Stephen
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Arshad, S. Hasan
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Ullah, Anhar
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Melén, Erik
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Henderson, John
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Bisgaard, Hans
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Pedersen, Anders Gorm
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Custovic, Adnan
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Vonk, Judith M.
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Koppelman, Gerard H.
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Kabesch, Michael
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Bønnelykke, Klaus
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Fischer-Rasmussen, Kasper, Granell, Raquel and Eliasen, Anders Ulrik , GABRIEL consortium, the EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology (EAGLE) Consortium (2025) Genetic characterization of preschool wheeze phenotypes. The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. (doi:10.1016/j.jaci.2025.07.015).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: preschool wheeze is a heterogenous and poorly understood clinical syndrome. As a result, current treatments are insufficient, and prevention is not possible. 

Objective: we sought to increase understanding of the genetic susceptibility and underlying disease mechanisms of wheeze phenotypes in early childhood through large-scale genome-wide association study analyses. 

Methods: we performed meta-analyses of genome-wide association study on early-onset wheeze, defined as recurrent wheeze or asthma in the first 3 years of life, and its subtypes, including early transient and persistent wheeze, defined by asthma/wheeze at age 3 and subsequent remission or persistence at age 6, respectively. The discovery analyses included data on more than 13,000 children from 15 cohorts; replication was sought through meta-analyses of data from 7 additional cohorts including up to 5000 children. Genetic variants associated with asthma-related traits in adulthood (adult asthma, atopy, eosinophils, and lung function) were used to quantify the degree to which genetic risk influencing asthma-related adult traits also influences genetic risk of preschool wheeze. 

Results: variants near the GSDMB gene in the 17q region showed genome-wide significant association with early-onset wheeze (rs2305480; odds ratio [95% confidence interval] = 1.26 [1.17-1.33], P = 2.30E-16) and persistent wheeze (rs11078926; 1.43 [1.30-1.578], P = 2.14E-11), but not with early transient wheeze (rs1054609; 1.08 [0.98-1.18], P = .094). Other known asthma loci were associated with early-onset wheeze, particularly CDHR3. Additionally, increased genetic risk to early-onset wheeze was associated with genetic risk for asthma at older ages, atopy, eosinophil count, and lower adult lung function. This was driven by persistent wheeze, whereas transient early wheeze was only associated with low lung function. 

Conclusions: preschool wheeze phenotypes displayed distinct patterns of single nucleotide polymorphism associations and genetic enrichment with asthma-related traits. These results indicate distinct etiologies of wheeze phenotypes, which could inform studies in optimization of prevention and treatment strategies.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 July 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 August 2025
Keywords: 17q21-12, asthma comorbidities, genetic overlap, genome-wide association study, Preschool wheeze

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505312
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505312
ISSN: 0091-6749
PURE UUID: e0fa065d-d04e-4f69-a1d8-611c979cbf2b
ORCID for John W. Holloway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9998-0464

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 16:31
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Kasper Fischer-Rasmussen
Author: Raquel Granell
Author: Anders Ulrik Eliasen
Author: Eskil Kreiner
Author: Casper-Emil Tingskov Pedersen
Author: Yang Luo
Author: Bo Chawes
Author: Jakob Stokholm
Author: Ann-Marie Malby Schoos
Author: Ashish Kumar
Author: Anne-Marie Nybo Andersen
Author: Bjarke Feenstra
Author: Frank Geller
Author: Valérie Siroux
Author: Florence Demenais
Author: Emmanuelle Bouzigon
Author: Vincent Jaddoe
Author: Ralf J.P. van der Valk
Author: Liesbeth Duijts
Author: Jordi Sunyer
Author: Mónica Guxens
Author: Marcella Marinelli
Author: Mariona Bustamante
Author: Joachim Heinrich
Author: Marie Standl
Author: Angela Simpson
Author: Clare Murray
Author: Bo Jacobsson
Author: Ronny Myhre
Author: Craig E. Pennell
Author: Denise Daley
Author: Carole Ober
Author: James E. Gern
Author: Dorret I. Boomsma
Author: Jouke-Jan Hottenga
Author: Abdel Abdellaoui
Author: Stephen Turner
Author: S. Hasan Arshad
Author: Anhar Ullah
Author: Erik Melén
Author: John Henderson
Author: Hans Bisgaard
Author: Anders Gorm Pedersen
Author: Adnan Custovic
Author: Judith M. Vonk
Author: Gerard H. Koppelman
Author: Michael Kabesch
Author: Klaus Bønnelykke
Corporate Author: GABRIEL consortium, the EArly Genetics and Lifecourse Epidemiology (EAGLE) Consortium

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