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Published May 27, 2021 | Version v1.0.0
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GWAS to single cell: Intersecting single-cell transcriptomics and genome wide association studies identifies crucial cell-populations and candidate genes for atherosclerosis.

  • 1. Central Diagnostics Laboratory, University Utrecht Medical Center

Contributors

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  • 1. Central Diagnostics Laboratory, University Utrecht Medical Center

Description

Background

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have discovered hundreds of common genetic variants for atherosclerotic disease and cardiovascular risk factors. The translation of susceptibility loci into biological mechanisms and targets for drug discovery remains challenging. Intersecting genetic and gene expression data has led to identification of candidate genes. However, the assayed tissues are often non-diseased and heterogeneous in cell composition confounding the candidate prioritization. We collected single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA-seq) from atherosclerotic plaques and aimed to identify cell-type-specific expression of disease-associated genes. 

 

Methods and Results

To identify disease-associated candidate genes, we applied gene-based analyses using GWAS summary statistics from 46 atherosclerotic, cardiometabolic, and other traits. Next we intersected these candidates with single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA-seq) to identify those genes that are specifically expressed in individual cell (sub)populations of atherosclerotic plaques. We derive an enrichment score and show that loci that associated with coronary artery disease demonstrated a prominent substrate in plaque smooth muscle cells (SKI, KANK2, SORT1), endothelial cells (SLC44A1, ATP2B1), and macrophages (APOE, HNRNPUL1). Further sub clustering of SMC-subtypes revealed genes in risk loci for coronary calcification specifically enriched in a synthetic cluster of SMCs. To verify the robustness of our approach, we used liver-derived scRNAseq-data and showed enrichment of circulating lipids-associated loci in hepatocytes.


Conclusion

We confirm known gene-cell pairs relevant for atherosclerotic disease, and discovered novel pairs pointing to new biological mechanisms amenable for therapy. We present an intuitive single-cell transcriptomics driven workflow rooted in human large-scale genetic studies to identify putative candidate genes and affected cells associated with cardiovascular traits.

 

Notes

Acknowledgements: The Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) Project was supported by the Common Fund of the Office of the Director of the National Institutes of Health, and by NCI, NHGRI, NHLBI, NIDA, NIMH, and NINDS. The data used for the analyses described in this manuscript were obtained from: FUMA GTEx Portal on 12-07-2020. We thank Sonya A. MacParland and Mauro J. Muraro for providing their scRNA-seq data on human liver and pancreatic islet cells at our request. We are thankful for the support of the ERA-CVD program 'druggable-MI-targets' (grant number: 01KL1802), the EU H2020 TO_AITION (grant number: 848146) and the Leducq Fondation 'PlaqOmics' (grantnumber: 18CVD02). Funding: Dr. Sander W. van der Laan is funded through grants from the Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative of the Netherlands Heart Foundation (CVON 2011/B019 and CVON 2017-20: Generating the best evidence-based pharmaceutical targets for atherosclerosis [GENIUS I&II]) and the Interuniversity Cardiology Institute of the Netherlands (ICIN, 09.001).

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Funding

TO_AITION – A high-dimensional approach for unwinding immune-metabolic causes of cardiovascular disease-depression multimorbidities 848146
European Commission