Genetic Pleiotropy and Causal Pathways Linking Glycemic Traits to Asthma: An Integrated Proteogenomic Investigation
Lin Chen, Juntao Lin, Yan Zhao, Guangli Zhang, Zhenxuan Kong, Chunlan Qiu, Kaicheng Peng, Hui Liu, Zhengxiu Luo

TL;DR
This study finds that obesity and type 2 diabetes share genetic links with asthma, suggesting that targeting shared inflammatory proteins could help treat both conditions.
Contribution
The study identifies specific shared genetic loci and proteins linking metabolic traits with asthma, revealing novel therapeutic targets.
Findings
Obesity and type 2 diabetes have significant genetic correlations with asthma.
Shared pleiotropic loci and proteins like IL6R, MAPK3, and CSF2 connect diabetes and asthma through inflammatory pathways.
Targeting JAK-STAT signaling may offer new treatments for comorbid diabetes and asthma.
Abstract
What are the main findings? Obesity (BMI) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) show significant genetic correlations and causal effects on asthma risk.Shared pleiotropic loci and key proteins (e.g., IL6R, MAPK3, CSF2) link diabetes/glycemic traits with asthma through inflammatory pathways. Obesity (BMI) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) show significant genetic correlations and causal effects on asthma risk. Shared pleiotropic loci and key proteins (e.g., IL6R, MAPK3, CSF2) link diabetes/glycemic traits with asthma through inflammatory pathways. What is the implication of the main finding? These findings suggest that metabolic dysfunction contributes to asthma pathogenesis via shared genetic and immunological mechanisms.Targeting colocalized proteins and pathways such as JAK-STAT signaling may provide novel therapeutic strategies for comorbid diabetes and asthma. These findings…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic Associations and Epidemiology · Diabetes and associated disorders · Fibroblast Growth Factor Research
