Genome-wide association analysis of blood-pressure traits in African-ancestry individuals reveals common associated genes in African and non-African populations.


Autoria(s): Franceschini N.; Fox E.; Zhang Z.; Edwards T.L.; Nalls M.A.; Sung Y.J.; Tayo B.O.; Sun Y.V.; Gottesman O.; Adeyemo A.; Johnson A.D.; Young J.H.; Rice K.; Duan Q.; Chen F.; Li Y.; Tang H.; Fornage M.; Keene K.L.; Andrews J.S.; Smith J.A.; Faul J.D.; Guangfa Z.; Guo W.; Liu Y.; Murray S.S.; Musani S.K.; Srinivasan S.; Velez Edwards D.R.; Wang H.; Becker L.C.; Bovet P.; Bochud M.; Broeckel U.; Burnier M.; Carty C.; Chasman D.I.; Ehret G.; Chen W.M.; Chen G.; Chen W.; Ding J.; Dreisbach A.W.; Evans M.K.; Guo X.; Garcia M.E.; Jensen R.; Keller M.F.; Lettre G.; Lotay V.; Martin L.W.; Moore J.H.; Morrison A.C.; Mosley T.H.; Ogunniyi A.; Palmas W.; Papanicolaou G.; Penman A.; Polak J.F.; Ridker P.M.; Salako B.; Singleton A.B.; Shriner D.; Taylor K.D.; Vasan R.; Wiggins K.; Williams S.M.; Yanek L.R.; Zhao W.; Zonderman A.B.; Becker D.M.; Berenson G.; Boerwinkle E.; Bottinger E.; Cushman M.; Eaton C.; Nyberg F.; Heiss G.; Hirschhron J.N.; Howard V.J.; Karczewsk K.J.; Lanktree M.B.; Liu K.; Liu Y.; Loos R.; Margolis K.; Snyder M.; Asian Genetic Epidemiology Network Consortium; Psaty B.M.; Psaty B.M.; Schork N.J.; Weir D.R.; Rotimi C.N.; Sale M.M.; Harris T.; Kardia S.L.; Hunt S.C.; Arnett D.; Redline S.; Cooper R.S.; Risch N.J.; Rao D.C.; Rotter J.I.; Chakravarti A.; Reiner A.P.; Levy D.; Keating B.J.; Zhu X.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

High blood pressure (BP) is more prevalent and contributes to more severe manifestations of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in African Americans than in any other United States ethnic group. Several small African-ancestry (AA) BP genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have been published, but their findings have failed to replicate to date. We report on a large AA BP GWAS meta-analysis that includes 29,378 individuals from 19 discovery cohorts and subsequent replication in additional samples of AA (n = 10,386), European ancestry (EA) (n = 69,395), and East Asian ancestry (n = 19,601). Five loci (EVX1-HOXA, ULK4, RSPO3, PLEKHG1, and SOX6) reached genome-wide significance (p < 1.0 × 10(-8)) for either systolic or diastolic BP in a transethnic meta-analysis after correction for multiple testing. Three of these BP loci (EVX1-HOXA, RSPO3, and PLEKHG1) lack previous associations with BP. We also identified one independent signal in a known BP locus (SOX6) and provide evidence for fine mapping in four additional validated BP loci. We also demonstrate that validated EA BP GWAS loci, considered jointly, show significant effects in AA samples. Consequently, these findings suggest that BP loci might have universal effects across studied populations, demonstrating that multiethnic samples are an essential component in identifying, fine mapping, and understanding their trait variability.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8CA92D98BCC9

isbn:1537-6605 (Electronic)

pmid:23972371

doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.07.010

isiid:000330268900014

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

American Journal of Human Genetics, vol. 93, no. 3, pp. 545-554

Palavras-Chave #Africa; African Continental Ancestry Group/genetics; Blood Pressure/genetics; Cohort Studies; Databases, Genetic; Genetic Loci/genetics; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Genome-Wide Association Study; Humans; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics; Quantitative Trait, Heritable; Reproducibility of Results
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article