Functional genomics of CDHR3 confirms its role in HRV-C infection and childhood asthma exacerbations.

J Allergy Clin Immunol

Center for Genes, Environment, and Health, National Jewish Health, Denver, Colo; Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colo; Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, Colo. Electronic address:

Published: October 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research shows that the CDHR3 protein acts as a receptor for human rhinovirus C (HRV-C) in airway cells, and a specific genetic variant (rs6967330) increases its presence on the cell surface.
  • * The study aimed to confirm the importance of CDHR3 in HRV-C infection within primary airway epithelial cells and to explore how genetic variations in CDHR3 contribute to asthma flare-ups.
  • * Findings revealed that CDHR3 is essential for HRV-C infection, particularly in ciliated airway cells, and the rs6967330 variant is linked to increased HRV-C infection and a higher risk of severe asthma in children.

Article Abstract

Background: Research in transformed immortalized cell lines indicates the cadherin-related family member 3 (CDHR3) protein serves as a receptor for human rhinovirus (HRV)-C. Similar experiments indicate that the CDHR3 coding variant rs6967330 increases CDHR3 protein surface expression.

Objective: We sought to determine whether CDHR3 is necessary for HRV-C infection of primary airway epithelial cells (AECs) and to identify molecular mechanisms by which CDHR3 variants confer risk for asthma exacerbations.

Methods: CDHR3 function and influence on HRV-C infection were investigated by using single-cell transcriptomics, CRISPR-Cas9 gene knockout, and genotype-specific donor experiments performed in primary AECs. Nasal airway epithelium cis-expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) analysis of CDHR3 was performed, followed by association testing for asthma hospitalization in minority children.

Results: CDHR3 lung expression is exclusive to ciliated AECs and associated with basal bodies during and after motile ciliogenesis. Knockout of CDHR3 in human AECs did not prevent ciliated cell differentiation but was associated with a decrease in transepithelial resistance and an 80% decrease in HRV-C infection of the mucociliary epithelium. AECs from subjects homozygous for the risk-associated rs6967330 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) exhibited greater HRV-C infection compared with cells homozygous for the nonrisk allele. AEC cis-eQTL analysis indicated that rs6967330 and other SNPs are eQTLs for CDHR3. Only the eQTL block containing the rs6967330 SNP showed a significant association with childhood asthma hospitalization.

Conclusions: Genetic deletion and genotype-specific studies in primary AECs indicate CDHR3 is critical to HRV-C infection of ciliated cells. The rs6967330 SNP confers risk of severe childhood asthma exacerbations, likely through increasing HRV-C infection levels and protein surface localization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6766426PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2019.01.052DOI Listing

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