AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute exacerbations of chronic rhinosinusitis (AECRS) are often worsened by rhinovirus (RV) infections, and the study investigates genetic risk factors associated with these infections, focusing on the CDHR3 gene.
  • In a year-long study, individuals carrying the minor allele rs6967330 showed significantly higher rates of RV and bacterial infections compared to those with the major allele.
  • The study also found that nasal airway cultures from minor allele carriers had higher levels of viral replication and exhibited changes in immune response pathways, suggesting that these genetic factors affect how the body responds to RV infections.

Article Abstract

Background: Acute exacerbations of chronic rhinosinusitis (AECRS) are commonly triggered by rhinovirus (RV) infections with secondary bacterial infections. Risk factors for AECRS are not well understood.

Objective: We sought to determine whether carriers of the minor allele rs6967330 (AA/AG) in the cadherin-related family member 3 (CDHR3) gene have an increased risk for RV infections in AECRS in vivo and identify CDHR3 genotype-dependent host responses to RV infection in differentiated nasal airway-liquid interface (ALI) cultures ex vivo.

Methods: We performed a prospective year-long study of adult subjects with chronic rhinosinusitis by the rs6967330 genotype (AA/AG, n = 16; GG, n = 38). We contacted subjects every 2 weeks, and if they reported AECRS, then clinical data were collected. ALI cultures of adults with chronic rhinosinusitis (AG/AA, n = 19; GG, n = 19) were challenged with RV-A and RV-C. We measured viral copy numbers at 4 and 48 hours postinfection and RNA transcriptomes and cytokines at 48 hours postinfection.

Results: Subjects with the minor allele had significantly higher rates of RV and bacterial infections than those with the major allele. ALI minor allele cultures had higher viral copy numbers of RV-A and RV-C after 48 hours compared with the major allele. Differentially expressed genes and pathways identified an upregulation of IL-10 and IL-4/IL-13 pathways and a significant downregulation of Toll-like receptor pathways in the minor allele cultures after RV-A and RV-C infection. Unsupervised hierarchical analysis of all differentially expressed genes suggested that allergic rhinitis had an additive effect on this response.

Conclusions: The rs6967330 minor allele is associated with increased RV-A and RV-C replication, downregulation of Toll-like receptor-mediated responses, and increased type-2 and cytokine and chemokine responses during RV infection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2024.09.025DOI Listing

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