Genetic imputation of kidney transcriptome, proteome and multi-omics illuminates new blood pressure and hypertension targets
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Published:2024-03-19
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Xu XiaoguangORCID, Khunsriraksakul ChachritORCID, Eales James M.ORCID, Rubin Sebastien, Scannali David, Saluja Sushant, Talavera DavidORCID, Markus Havell, Wang LidaORCID, Drzal Maciej, Maan Akhlaq, Lay Abigail C.ORCID, Prestes Priscilla R.ORCID, Regan JenieceORCID, Diwadkar Avantika R., Denniff Matthew, Rempega Grzegorz, Ryszawy Jakub, Król Robert, Dormer John P.ORCID, Szulinska Monika, Walczak Marta, Antczak Andrzej, Matías-García Pamela R., Waldenberger MelanieORCID, Woolf Adrian S.ORCID, Keavney BernardORCID, Zukowska-Szczechowska Ewa, Wystrychowski Wojciech, Zywiec Joanna, Bogdanski Pawel, Danser A. H. JanORCID, Samani Nilesh J., Guzik Tomasz J., Morris Andrew P.ORCID, Liu Dajiang J., Charchar Fadi J.ORCID, , Tomaszewski MaciejORCID
Abstract
AbstractGenetic mechanisms of blood pressure (BP) regulation remain poorly defined. Using kidney-specific epigenomic annotations and 3D genome information we generated and validated gene expression prediction models for the purpose of transcriptome-wide association studies in 700 human kidneys. We identified 889 kidney genes associated with BP of which 399 were prioritised as contributors to BP regulation. Imputation of kidney proteome and microRNAome uncovered 97 renal proteins and 11 miRNAs associated with BP. Integration with plasma proteomics and metabolomics illuminated circulating levels of myo-inositol, 4-guanidinobutanoate and angiotensinogen as downstream effectors of several kidney BP genes (SLC5A11, AGMAT, AGT, respectively). We showed that genetically determined reduction in renal expression may mimic the effects of rare loss-of-function variants on kidney mRNA/protein and lead to an increase in BP (e.g., ENPEP). We demonstrated a strong correlation (r = 0.81) in expression of protein-coding genes between cells harvested from urine and the kidney highlighting a diagnostic potential of urinary cell transcriptomics. We uncovered adenylyl cyclase activators as a repurposing opportunity for hypertension and illustrated examples of BP-elevating effects of anticancer drugs (e.g. tubulin polymerisation inhibitors). Collectively, our studies provide new biological insights into genetic regulation of BP with potential to drive clinical translation in hypertension.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference189 articles.
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