Core-001

NIH RePORTER · NIH · U19 · $820,188 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

SUMMARY While GWAS have identified hundreds of genetic variants in at least 150 loci associated with asthma and allergic diseases (AAD), the translation of those findings into a better understanding of asthma etiology have lagged significantly. This is due, in part, to the fact that most AAD-associated variants are in noncoding sequences, often at great distance from genes. The underlying consensus is that a number of these variants impart their effects in disease risk by disrupting the regulatory properties of regulatory elements, such as enhancers and promoters. The challenges to efficiently extract hypothesis-generating information from GWAS loci include i) identifying the causal variant(s) in each GWAS locus, ii) determining the type of regulatory element in which these variants are mapped, iii) inferring the tissue-specificity of these regulatory elements, iv) defining the target genes for these regulatory elements, and v) demonstrating a phenotypic effect of these variants. This Center proposal aims to develop a computational and experimental framework to tackle all these outstanding challenges. In Project 1, an innovative statistical and computational framework will be developed to link functional annotations in AAD-associated loci to identify candidate variants, regulatory sequences and genes that are mediating the genetic association. These annotations will be generated from cells obtained in Project 2, which iteratively will also be able to test some of the predictions made from Project 1 in in vitro and in vivo models. The generation of the functional annotations necessitate the use of several state-of-the-art genomics strategies. The goal of the (Epi)Genomics Core (EGC) is to serve as the genomics data generation hub for this Center. We propose t carry over 500 whole-genome assays in multiple asthma-relevant primary cell types obtained in Project 2. In Aim 1 we will generate transcription and chromatin accessibility maps for each of these cells under baseline and stimulated conditions. We will utilize a suite of complementary chromatin accessibility assays, including ATAC-seq, KAS-sew and whole genome bisulfite sequencing, in addition to RNA-seq to generate dynamic transcription maps in each cell line in response to specific stimuli. In Aim 2 we will “wire” regulatory elements to their target genes, utilizing chromatin conformation capture. Finally, we will test the regulatory potential of thousands of candidate variants identified in Project 1 in a massively parallel reporter assay. The combination of comprehensive functional annotations in multiple cell types and states represent an ambitious departure from the traditional efforts to link variants to function in single loci to a systematic approach that interrogates the whole genome at once. We anticipate that our research strategy will generate a large number of specific hypothesis that will be pursued in similar ways to what we propose in Project 2. As ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
11076919
Project number
5U19AI162310-04
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Principal Investigator
Marcelo A. Nobrega
Activity code
U19
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$820,188
Award type
5
Project period
2021-07-19 → 2026-04-30