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UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – ‘UK GoLD’ Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof Jeremy Lambert, Dundee University 1 st MRC – IMPC Mouse Network Meeting, MRC Harwell, January 2012

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Page 1: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – ‘UK GoLD’

RepresentativesDr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle UniversityProf Alastair Burt, Newcastle UniversityProf Jeremy Lambert, Dundee University

1st MRC – IMPC Mouse Network Meeting, MRC Harwell, January 2012

Page 2: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Background

• Liver disease is 5th most common cause of death in UK.

• Common liver diseases are result of the interaction between environmental factors and multiple genetic factors which determine susceptibility.

ONS, 2009

Page 3: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

UK GoLD

UK GoLD

In vivo models

Basic Science

DNA & Tissue Banks

Patient Cohorts

Clinical Trials

Industry Links

Page 4: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Consortium Aims

To translate genetic association into a mechanistic understanding of disease pathogenesis and onwards

to the identification of novel therapeutic targets

• To identify genes that confer susceptibility to risk behaviors and determine disease severity;

• To understand mechanisms by which genes & gene-environment interactions cause disease;

• To validate GWAS and candidate gene associations through translational research;

• To identify and exploit novel potential therapeutic targets.

Page 5: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Cross-Cutting Research Themes

• An initiator of liver disease risk

Mechanisms of Addiction Behavior

• Inflammation and hepatocellular injury

Mechanisms of Metabolic Liver Disease

• The final common pathway of liver injury

Modifiers of Hepatic Fibrosis and Liver Regeneration

Page 6: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

• An initiator of liver disease risk

Consortium Members

Mechanisms of Addiction Behavior

* Prof J. Lambert University of Dundee

* Dr D. Belelli University of Dundee

* Prof D. Stephens Sussex University

* Prof T. Smart UCL

Prof S. Brown MRC Harwell

*§ Dr Q.M. Anstee Newcastle University

*§ Prof H.C. Thomas Imperial College

§ Prof W. Wisden Imperial College

* MRC ‘GABA’ Addiction Cluster§ MRC ‘ICCAM’ Addiction Cluster

Page 7: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

ENU Mutagenesis: A Route to Gene Discovery

• ENU-induced mutations of GABRB1 gene leads to increased alcohol consumption, increased motivation for alcohol, and increased sensitivity to alcohol.

• Mutant mice show massive increases in tonic GABA currents in accumbens medium spiny neurones that are integral to reward and motivation, suggesting that decreasing tonic GABA currents may reduce alcohol intake

• In humans, allelic differences of the GABRB1 gene were associated with alcohol dependence.

Page 8: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Linking Genes to Behaviour: Towards Endophenotypes

• Variations in the gene encoding 2 a subunits of GABA receptors are associated with cocaine and alcohol addiction in people.

• Deleting 2a genes in mice reduces GABA currents in accumbens medium spiny neurones by 30% and prevents cocaine’s effects on conditioned behaviours.

WT

2-/-a

0 3 100

100

200

300

400

WT

2 deleted

Cocaine-facilitates conditioned reward in normal animals butnot if 2 subunits of GABA receptors are missing

Cocaine (mg/kg)

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nd

itio

ne

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a2 2bg

Variations in the gene for 2 a are associated with cocaine addiction in

peoplea4bd

Conditioned reinforcement in people

Page 9: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

• Inflammation and hepatocellular injury

Consortium Members

Mechanisms of Metabolic Liver Disease

* Dr Q.M. Anstee Newcastle University Prof A. Burt Newcastle University

* Prof C.P. Day Newcastle University * Prof A. Daly Newcastle University * Prof D. Jones Newcastle University * Prof R. Goldin Imperial College * Prof M. Thursz Imperial College * Prof S. Brown MRC Harwell * Prof R. Cox MRC Harwell * Dr P. Potter MRC Harwell

Prof D. Adams University of BirminghamDr P. Newsome University of Birmingham Dr G. Alexander Cambridge University

* MRC Harwell Liver ENU Research Programme

Page 10: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Research Areas

• Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease– Progressive steatohepatitis and fibrosis associated with T2DM, obesity and

the metabolic syndrome. – Tissue oxidative stress response.– Role of caspase activation in disease pathogenesis.

• Immune Mediated Liver Injury– Primary Biliary Cirrhosis– Leucocyte-endothelial interactions and effector cell trafficking.

• Drug Induced Liver Disease & Toxicity– Idiosyncratic drug reactions– Paracetamol toxicity

Page 11: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

GWAS Activity

• ‘FLIP’ – Fatty Liver Inhibition of Progression– FP7 funded European research programme (Anstee, Burt, Daly, Day) – GWAS of biopsy-proven NAFLD– Establish large prospective and retrospective cohorts with NAFLD,

NASH and NAFLD-related HCC for translational study.

• ‘UK PBC Consortium’ – Recently completed GWAS of PBC (Jones, Mells, Alexander)– Established the largest PBC cohort in the world for study.

• ‘GenomALC’ – Genetics of Alcoholic Liver Disease– International study, GWAS of ALD (Day)

• ‘DILIGEN’ - Drug Induced Liver Injury– GWAS of Idiosyncratic DILI across a range of agents (Daly, Day)

Page 12: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

• The final common pathway of liver injury

Consortium Members

Modifiers of Hepatic Fibrosis and Liver Regeneration

Prof A. Burt Newcastle University

Prof D. Mann Newcastle University Dr Q.M. Anstee Newcastle University

Prof M. Thursz Imperial College

Prof R. Goldin Imperial College

Dr P. Newsome University of Birmingham

Prof D. Adams University of Birmingham

Page 13: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Translation from Association to Mechanism & Therapy

• Role of coagulation system activation in Liver fibrosis and stellate cell activation.

• Translational studies demonstrate that carriers of FvL mutation have accelerated fibrosis.

• This was confirmed in FvL mice and anticoagulation demonstrated to be an effected anti-fibrotic.

• On-going MRC Experimental medicine funded clinical trial (WAFT-C).

C57BL/6 FvL

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ti-SM

A

C57BL/6 + Warfarin

Page 14: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

Targeting the Renin-Angiotensin System (RAS) to Treat Fibrosis

• Hepatic stellate cells have a RAS that prevents apoptosis. Drugs that induce apoptosis will stimulate fibrosis reversion despite ongoing liver injury.

Page 15: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

UK GoLD Consortium Activity within the IMPC

• Current GWAS and hypothesis-driven research by UK GoLD members will help to guide IMPC gene prioritisation.

• UK GoLD members will establish a working group of clinicians to review IMPC clinical biochemistry data for metabolic, hepatitic and cholestatic compound phenotypes.

• Members will input into the phenotype pipelines to assess utility of screens and help guide technical development of the pipeline.

Page 16: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof

UK GoLD Consortium Activity within the IMPC

• Members will integrate with IMPC to use mice in established basic research programmes as specific knockouts become available.

• Potential UK GoLD Secondary Screens include:– Electrophysiology (in vivo and in vitro), – Addiction/motivational behaviours, – Response to environmental challenges: EtOH, HFD, ALIOS, DILI,– Fibrosis models: MCD, CCl4, Thiocetamide, BDL, etc.

• UK GoLD will institute histological screens for liver disease in selected knockout animals. – Two internationally recognised expert liver pathologists (Burt and Goldin) with

extensive experience in murine histopathology.

• Bidirectional translational Studies.

Page 17: UK Genetics of Liver Disease Consortium – UK GoLD Representatives Dr Quentin M. Anstee, Newcastle University Prof Alastair Burt, Newcastle University Prof