Single-cell lung eQTL dataset of Asian never-smokers highlights the roles of alveolar cells in lung cancer etiology
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Single-cell expression quantitative trait loci (sc-eQTL) analyses are powerful in identifying context-specific susceptibility genes from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) loci. However, few studies have comprehensively investigated cells of lung cancer origin in non-European populations. Here, we built a lung sc-eQTL dataset from 129 Korean women never-smokers with epithelial cell enrichment. eQTL mapping identified 2,229 genes with an eQTL in 33 cell types, including East Asian-specific findings when compared to predominantly European datasets. Integration with single-cell chromatin accessibility data demonstrated an enrichment of cell-type specific eQTLs in cell-type matched candidate enhancers, while shared eQTLs were more frequently found near promoters. Colocalization and transcriptome-wide association study unveiled 36 susceptibility genes from 22 cell types in 22 lung cancer loci, including 10 loci not achieving genome-wide significance in prior GWAS. Around 47% of these genes were from cells of the alveoli, underscoring their importance, especially in lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) susceptibility. Focusing on the trajectory of alveolar epithelial cell regeneration, we detected 785 cell-state-interacting QTLs, which overlapped with 28% (10) of the identified susceptibility genes. Finally, we experimentally validated East Asian-and alveolar type 2 cell-specific eQTL of TCF7L2 underlying East Asian LUAD locus, 10q25.2. Consistent with its role as a Wnt/β-catenin effector, TCF7L2 displayed significant effect on lung adenocarcinoma cell growth. Our data highlighted context-specific susceptibility genes, especially from alveolar cells of lung, contributing to lung cancer etiology.