Abstract

The purpose of the study was to identify genetic variants associated with rotator cuff disease by performing a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for shoulder impingement using the UK Biobank (UKB) cohort and then combining the GWAS data with a prior GWAS for rotator cuff tears. The loci identified by the GWAS and meta-analysis were examined for changes in expression following rotator cuff tearing using RNA sequencing. A GWAS was performed using data from UKB with 3864 cases of shoulder impingement. The summary statistics from shoulder impingement and a prior study on rotator cuff tears were combined in a meta-analysis. Also, the previous association of 2 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with shoulder impingement from a published GWAS using the UKB was tested. Rotator cuff tendon biopsies were obtained from 24 patients with full-thickness rotator cuff tears who underwent arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (cases) and 9 patients who underwent open reduction internal fixation for a proximal humeral fracture (controls). Total RNA was extracted and differential gene expression was measured by RNA sequencing for genes with variants associated with rotator cuff tearing. The shoulder impingement GWAS identified 4 new loci: LOC100506457, LSP1P3, LOC100506207, and MIS18BP1/LINC00871. Combining data with a prior GWAS for rotator cuff tears in a meta-analysis resulted in the identification of an additional 7 loci: SLC39A8/UBE2D3, C5orf63, ASTN2, STK24, FRMPD4, ACOT9/SAT1, and LINC00890/ALG13. Many of the identified loci have known biologic functions or prior associations with diseases, suggesting possible biologic pathways leading to rotator cuff disease. RNA sequencing experiments show that expression of STK24 increases whereas expression of SAT1 and UBE2D3 decreases following rotator cuff tearing. Two SNPs previously reported to show an association with shoulder impingement from a prior UKB GWAS were not validated in our study. This is the first GWAS for shoulder impingement in which new data from UKB enabled the identification of 4 loci showing a genetic association. A meta-analysis with a prior GWAS for rotator cuff tearing identified an additional 7 loci. The known biologic roles of many of the 11 loci suggest plausible biologic mechanisms underlying the etiology of rotator cuff disease. The risk alleles from each of the genetic loci can be used to assess the risk for rotator cuff disease in individual patients, enabling preventative or restorative actions via personalized medicine.

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