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Fine Mapping and Functional Analysis Reveal a Role of SLC22A1 in Acylcarnitine Transport.

Citation
Kim, H. I., et al. “Fine Mapping And Functional Analysis Reveal A Role Of Slc22A1 In Acylcarnitine Transport.”. American Journal Of Human Genetics, pp. 489-502.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Hye In Kim, Johannes Raffler, Wenyun Lu, Jung-Jin Lee, Deepti Abbey, Danish Saleheen, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Michael J Bennett, Nicholas J Hand, Christopher Brown, Daniel J Rader
Keywords SLC22A1, acylcarnitines, allelic imbalance, fine mapping, genomics, metabolite GWAS, metabolomics
Abstract

Genome-wide association studies have identified a signal at the SLC22A1 locus for serum acylcarnitines, intermediate metabolites of mitochondrial oxidation whose plasma levels associate with metabolic diseases. Here, we refined the association signal, performed conditional analyses, and examined the linkage structure to find coding variants of SLC22A1 that mediate independent association signals at the locus. We also employed allele-specific expression analysis to find potential regulatory variants of SLC22A1 and demonstrated the effect of one variant on the splicing of SLC22A1. SLC22A1 encodes a hepatic plasma membrane transporter whose role in acylcarnitine physiology has not been described. By targeted metabolomics and isotope tracing experiments in loss- and gain-of-function cell and mouse models of Slc22a1, we uncovered a role of SLC22A1 in the efflux of acylcarnitines from the liver to the circulation. We further validated the impacts of human variants on SLC22A1-mediated acylcarnitine efflux in vitro, explaining their association with serum acylcarnitine levels. Our findings provide the detailed molecular mechanisms of the GWAS association for serum acylcarnitines at the SLC22A1 locus by functionally validating the impact of SLC22A1 and its variants on acylcarnitine transport.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
American journal of human genetics
Volume
101
Issue
4
Number of Pages
489-502
Date Published
10/2017
ISSN Number
1537-6605
DOI
10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.08.008
Alternate Journal
Am. J. Hum. Genet.
PMID
28942964
PMCID
PMC5630162
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