Abstract

BackgroundRecent research reported that frailty was prevalent among adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) in clinical trials, and monocytes illustrated a similar difference in these two diseases compared to the normal. However, the scientific evidence for a causal relationship between these two diseases was lacking, with further exploration into whether monocytes co-regulate them. MethodsWe aimed to integrate large-scale Mendelian randomization (MR) and single-cell transcriptome analysis to determine whether there was a causal relationship between frailty and CKD (Bidirectional two-sample Mendelian determined the causal direction), whether monocytes impacted them, and whether the two diseases shared genetic variation sites. Based on 441 Genome-wide association study datasets, this study utilized five MR methods, multiple sensitivity analysis, and corresponding single-cell transcriptome datasets as proof. ResultsThe association between frailty and CKD was significantly causal, and frailty increased the risk of CKD in patients (OR (95 %CI): 3.5597 (1.8369–6.8982), p = 0.000168909). The exposure monocyte can increase the risk of frailty and CKD in patients, especially with high expression of HLA genes in these cells. The existing two-sample MR results cannot reject the hypothesis that monocytes increase the risk of CKD by inducing frailty. rs9275271’ 1mb genetic location above and below had been proven to be an effective genetic space for both frailty and CKD. ConclusionWe conducted the largest MR to date on frailty, monocyte, and CKD, and found a significant causal association between frailty and CKD, with the single-cell analysis confirmed. The exposure monocytes increased the risk of frailty and CKD, particularly with high expression of HLA genes in these cells. We identified a potential common genetic variant space, rs9275271, associated with frailty and CKD, providing insights into the genetic basis of these conditions.

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