Litcius/Paper detail

No evidence of a genetic causal relationship between ankylosing spondylitis and iron homeostasis: A two-sample Mendelian randomization study

Mingyi Yang, Hui Yu, Ke Xu, Jiale Xie, Haishi Zheng, Ruoyang Feng, Jiachen Wang, Peng Xu

2023Frontiers in Nutrition32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is an immune-mediated chronic inflammatory disease that leads to bone hyperplasia and spinal ankylosis. Iron homeostasis plays a very important role in the inflammatory response and is closely related to the pathogenesis of AS. This study aimed to use large-scale genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary data to study the genetic causal relationship between AS and iron homeostasis using Mendelian randomization (MR). Methods Genome-wide association study summary data of AS and iron homeostasis-related indicators were obtained from the FinnGen consortium and the DeCODE genetics database, respectively. We used four iron homeostasis-related indicators: ferritin, serum iron, total iron binding capacity (TIBC), and transferrin saturation (TSAT) for two-sample MR analyses to test for genetic causal association with AS using the “TwoSampleMR” package of the R software (version 4.1.2). The random-effects inverse variance weighted (IVW) method was the main analysis method used for MR. We examined the MR analysis results for heterogeneity, horizontal pleiotropy, and possible outliers. In addition, we confirmed the robustness of the MR analysis by testing whether the results were affected by a single SNP and whether they followed a normal distribution. Results The random-effects IVW results showed that ferritin [ p = 0.225, OR 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.836 (0.627–1.116)], serum iron [ p = 0.714, OR 95% CI = 0.948 (0.714–1.260)], TIBC [ p = 0.380, OR 95% CI = 0.917 (0.755–1.113)], and TSAT [ p = 0.674, OR 95% CI = 0.942 (0.713–1.244)] have no genetic causal relationship with AS. We detected no heterogeneity,horizontal pleiotropy and possible outliers in our MR analysis ( p > 0.05). In addition, our MR analysis results were not affected by a single SNP, and were normally distributed. Conclusion Our study did not detect a genetic causal relationship between AS and iron homeostasis. Nonetheless, this does not rule out a relationship between the two at other mechanistic levels.

Topics & Concepts

Mendelian randomizationTransferrin saturationAnkylosing spondylitisGenome-wide association studyMedicineSerum ironFerritinTransferrinInternal medicineIron deficiencyImmunologyPhysiologyBiologyGeneticsSingle-nucleotide polymorphismAnemiaGenotypeGeneGenetic variantsSpondyloarthritis Studies and TreatmentsGenetic Associations and EpidemiologyRheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies
No evidence of a genetic causal relationship between ankylosing spondylitis and iron homeostasis: A two-sample Mendelian randomization study | Litcius