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      The CHRNA5/CHRNA3/CHRNB4 nicotinic receptor regulome: genomic architecture, regulatory variants, and clinical associations

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          Abstract

          Functionally related genes often cluster into a genome region under coordinated regulation, forming a local regulome. To understand regulation of the CHRNA5/CHRNA3/CHRNB4 nicotinic receptor gene cluster, we integrate large-scale RNA expression data (brain and peripheral) from GTEx (Genotype Tissue Expression), clinical associations (GRASP) and linkage disequilibrium data (1,000 Genomes) to find candidate SNPs representing independent regulatory variants. CHRNA3, CHRNA5, CHRNB4 mRNAs, and a well-expressed CHRNA5 antisense RNA (RP11-650L12.2) are co-expressed in many human tissues, suggesting common regulatory elements. The CHRNA5 enhancer haplotype tagged by rs880395 not only increases CHRNA5 mRNA expression in all tissues, but also enhances RP11-650L12.2 and CHRNA3 expression, suggesting DNA looping to multiple promoters. However, in nucleus accumbens and putamen, but not other brain regions, CHRNA3 expression associates uniquely with a haplotype tagged by rs1948 (located in the CHRNB4 3′UTR). Haplotype/diplotype analysis of rs880395 and rs1948 plus rs16969968 (a nonsynonymous CHRNA5 risk variant) in GWAS (COGEND, UW-TTURC, SAGE) yields a nicotine dependence risk profile only partially captured by rs16969968 alone. An example of local gene clusters, this nicotinic regulome is controlled by complex genetic variation, with broad implications for interpreting GWAS.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9215429
          2408
          Hum Mutat
          Hum. Mutat.
          Human mutation
          1059-7794
          1098-1004
          27 October 2016
          07 November 2016
          January 2017
          01 January 2018
          : 38
          : 1
          : 112-119
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Center for Pharmacogenomics, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
          [2 ]Institute for Genomic Medicine, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH
          [3 ]University of Lodz, Lodz, PL
          Author notes
          [* ]Corresponding author. 1004 Biomedical Research Tower, 460 W 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1239, United States, Tel: 614 292 5593, wolfgang.sadee@ 123456osumc.edu
          [¶]

          These authors contributed equally to this work

          Article
          PMC5154896 PMC5154896 5154896 nihpa825355
          10.1002/humu.23135
          5154896
          27758088
          e19f0ec3-de8a-49f4-8786-88c67e39d5e3
          History
          Categories
          Article

          eQTL,human,smoking,gene expression,functional genomics,regulome,nicotinic receptor subunit,genetic association studies,genetic variation

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