Journal article icon

Journal article

Functional characterisation of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis risk locus GPX3/TNIP1

Abstract:
Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a complex, late-onset, neurodegenerative disease with a genetic contribution to disease liability. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified ten risk loci to date, including the TNIP1/GPX3 locus on chromosome five. Given association analysis data alone cannot determine the most plausible risk gene for this locus, we undertook a comprehensive suite of in silico, in vivo and in vitro studies to address this. Methods The Functional Mapping and Annotation (FUMA) pipeline and five tools (conditional and joint analysis (GCTA-COJO), Stratified Linkage Disequilibrium Score Regression (S-LDSC), Polygenic Priority Scoring (PoPS), Summary-based Mendelian Randomisation (SMR-HEIDI) and transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) analyses) were used to perform bioinformatic integration of GWAS data (Ncases = 20,806, Ncontrols = 59,804) with ‘omics reference datasets including the blood (eQTLgen consortium N = 31,684) and brain (N = 2581). This was followed up by specific expression studies in ALS case-control cohorts (microarray Ntotal = 942, protein Ntotal = 300) and gene knockdown (KD) studies of human neuronal iPSC cells and zebrafish-morpholinos (MO). Results SMR analyses implicated both TNIP1 and GPX3 (p < 1.15 × 10−6), but there was no simple SNP/expression relationship. Integrating multiple datasets using PoPS supported GPX3 but not TNIP1. In vivo expression analyses from blood in ALS cases identified that lower GPX3 expression correlated with a more progressed disease (ALS functional rating score, p = 5.5 × 10−3, adjusted R2 = 0.042, Beffect = 27.4 ± 13.3 ng/ml/ALSFRS unit) with microarray and protein data suggesting lower expression with risk allele (recessive model p = 0.06, p = 0.02 respectively). Validation in vivo indicated gpx3 KD caused significant motor deficits in zebrafish-MO (mean difference vs. control ± 95% CI, vs. control, swim distance = 112 ± 28 mm, time = 1.29 ± 0.59 s, speed = 32.0 ± 2.53 mm/s, respectively, p for all < 0.0001), which were rescued with gpx3 expression, with no phenotype identified with tnip1 KD or gpx3 overexpression. Conclusions These results support GPX3 as a lead ALS risk gene in this locus, with more data needed to confirm/reject a role for TNIP1. This has implications for understanding disease mechanisms (GPX3 acts in the same pathway as SOD1, a well-established ALS-associated gene) and identifying new therapeutic approaches. Few previous examples of in-depth investigations of risk loci in ALS exist and a similar approach could be applied to investigate future expected GWAS findings
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions

Access Document

Authors

More by this author
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0001-8434-4465
More by this author
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-4782-3608
More by this author
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0003-4118-251X
More by this author
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-1388-2108


More from this funder
Funder identifier:
10.13039/100000002
Grant:
T32HG002536
More from this funder
Funder identifier:
10.13039/100010663
Grant:
772376
More from this funder
Funder identifier:
10.13039/100000025
Grant:
R01-MH115676
More from this funder
Funder identifier:
10.13039/501100000925
Grant:
1078901
More from this funder
Funder identifier:
10.13039/501100001061
Grant:
PG2019405


Publisher:
BioMed Central
Journal:
Genome Medicine More from this journal
Volume:
14
Issue:
1
Pages:
7-7
Article number:
7
Publication date:
2022-01-19
DOI:
EISSN:
1756-994X
ISSN:
1756-994X


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1375995
Local pid:
pubs:1375995
Source identifiers:
W4205449517
Deposit date:
2026-05-08
ARK identifier:
This ORA record was generated from metadata provided by an external service. It has not been edited by the ORA Team.

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP