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New Functional Apolipoprotein B Variant Influencing Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein Levels But Not Cardiovascular Events: Genome-Wide Association Study

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Genome-Wide Association Study Pinpoints a New Functional Apolipoprotein B Variant Influencing Oxidized Low-Density Lipoprotein Levels But Not Cardiovascular Events

AtheroRemo Consortium

Kari-Matti Mäkelä, BM, BSc, Ilkka Seppälä, MSc, Jussi A. Hernesniemi, MD, PhD, Leo-Pekka Lyytikäinen, MD, Niku Oksala, MD, PhD, DSc, Marcus E. Kleber, PhD, Hubert Scharnagl, PhD, Tanja B. Grammer, MD, Jens Baumert, PhD, Barbara Thorand, PhD,Antti Jula, MD, PhD, Nina Hutri-Kähönen, MD, PhD, Markus Juonala, MD, PhD, Tomi Laitinen, MD, PhD, Reijo Laaksonen, MD, PhD, Pekka J. Karhunen, MD, PhD, Kjell C. Nikus, MD, PhD, Tuomo Nieminen, MD, PhD, MSc, Jari Laurikka, MD, PhD, Pekka Kuukasjärvi, MD, PhD, Matti Tarkka, MD, PhD, Jari Viik, PhD, Norman Klopp, PhD,Thomas Illig, PhD, Johannes Kettunen, PhD, Markku Ahotupa, PhD, Jorma S.A. Viikari, MD, PhD, Mika Kähönen, MD, PhD, Olli T. Raitakari, MD, PhD, Mahir Karakas, MD, Wolfgang Koenig, MD, PhD, Bernhard O. Boehm, MD, Bernhard R. Winkelmann, MD, Winfried März, MD and Terho Lehtimäki, MD, PhD

Correspondence to Kari-Matti Mäkelä, Department of Clinical Chemistry, Finn-Medi 2, PO Box 2000, FI-33521 Tampere, Finland. E-mail kari-matti.makela@uta.fi

Abstract

Background—Oxidized low-density lipoprotein may be a key factor in the development of atherosclerosis. We performed a genome-wide association study on oxidized low-density lipoprotein and tested the impact of associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on the risk factors of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular events.

Methods and Results—A discovery genome-wide association study was performed on a population of young healthy white individuals (N=2080), and the SNPs associated with a P<5×10–8 were replicated in 2 independent samples (A: N=2912; B: N=1326). Associations with cardiovascular endpoints were also assessed with 2 additional clinical cohorts (C: N=1118; and D: N=808). We found 328 SNPs associated with oxidized low-density lipoprotein. The genetic variant rs676210 (Pro2739Leu) in apolipoprotein B was the proxy SNP behind all associations (P=4.3×10–136, effect size=13.2 U/L per allele). This association was replicated in the 2 independent samples (A and B, P=2.5×10–47 and 1.1×10–11, effect sizes=10.3 U/L and 7.8 U/L, respectively). In the meta-analyses of cohorts A, C, and D (excluding cohort B without angiographic data), the top SNP did not associate significantly with the age of onset of angiographically verified coronary artery disease (hazard ratio=1.00 [0.94–1.06] per allele), 3-vessel coronary artery disease (hazard ratio=1.03 [0.94–1.13]), or myocardial infarction (hazard ratio=1.04 [0.96–1.12]).

Conclusions—This novel genetic marker is an important factor regulating oxidized low-density lipoprotein levels but not a major genetic factor for the studied cardiovascular endpoints.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2013; 6: 73-81

Published online before print December 17, 2012,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.112.964965

 

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Resuscitation From Sudden Cardiac Arrest: Common Variation in Fatty Acid Genes

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Common Variation in Fatty Acid Genes and Resuscitation From Sudden Cardiac Arrest

Catherine O. Johnson, PhD, MPH, Rozenn N. Lemaitre, PhD, MPH, Carol E. Fahrenbruch, MSPH, Stephanie Hesselson, PhD, Nona Sotoodehnia, MD, MPH,Barbara McKnight, PhD, Kenneth M. Rice, PhD, Pui-Yan Kwok, MD, PhD, David S. Siscovick, MD, MPH and Thomas D. Rea, MD, MPH

Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Medicine (C.O.J., R.N.L., N.S., D.S.S., T.D.R.), Biostatistics (B.M., K.M.R.), and Epidemiology (D.S.S), University of Washington, Seattle; King County Emergency Medical Services, Seattle, WA (C.E.F.); and Institute of Human Genetics, University of California San Francisco (S.H., P.-Y.K.).

Correspondence to Catherine O. Johnson, PhD, MPH, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, CHRU 1730 Minor Ave, Suite 1360, Seattle, WA 98101. E-mail johnsoco@uw.edu

Abstract

Background—Fatty acids provide energy and structural substrates for the heart and brain and may influence resuscitation from sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). We investigated whether genetic variation in fatty acid metabolism pathways was associated with SCA survival.

Methods and Results—Subjects (mean age, 67 years; 80% male, white) were out-of-hospital SCA patients found in ventricular fibrillation in King County, WA. We compared subjects who survived to hospital admission (n=664) with those who did not (n=689), and subjects who survived to hospital discharge (n=334) with those who did not (n=1019). Associations between survival and genetic variants were assessed using logistic regression adjusting for age, sex, location, time to arrival of paramedics, whether the event was witnessed, and receipt of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Within-gene permutation tests were used to correct for multiple comparisons. Variants in 5 genes were significantly associated with SCA survival. After correction for multiple comparisons, single-nucleotide polymorphisms in ACSL1 and ACSL3 were significantly associated with survival to hospital admission. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in ACSL3, AGPAT3, MLYCD, and SLC27A6 were significantly associated with survival to hospital discharge.

Conclusions—Our findings indicate that variants in genes important in fatty acid metabolism are associated with SCA survival in this population.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2012; 5: 422-429

Published online before print June 1, 2012

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.111.961912

 

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LDL, HDL, TG, ApoA1 and ApoB: Genetic Loci Associated With Plasma Concentration of these Biomarkers – A Genome-Wide Analysis With Replication

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Genetic Loci Associated With Plasma Concentration of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol, High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol, Triglycerides, Apolipoprotein A1, and Apolipoprotein B Among 6382 White Women in Genome-Wide Analysis With Replication

Daniel I. Chasman, PhD*Guillaume Paré, MD, MS*Robert Y.L. Zee, PhD, MPH, Alex N. Parker, PhD, Nancy R. Cook, ScD, Julie E. Buring, ScD, David J. Kwiatkowski, MD, PhD, Lynda M. Rose, MS, Joshua D. Smith, BS, Paul T. Williams, PhD, Mark J. Rieder, PhD, Jerome I. Rotter, MD, Deborah A. Nickerson, PhD, Ronald M. Krauss, MD,Joseph P. Miletich, MD and Paul M Ridker, MD, MPH

Author Affiliations

From the Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention (D.I.C., G.P., R.Y.L.Z., N.R.C., J.E.B., L.M.R., P.M.R.) and Donald W. Reynolds Center for Cardiovascular Research (D.I.C., G.P., R.Y.L.Z., N.R.C., D.J.K., P.M.R.), Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass; Amgen, Inc, Cambridge, Mass (A.N.P., J.M.P.); Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash (J.D.S., M.J.R., D.A.N.); Life Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, Calif (P.T.W., R.M.K.); Medical Genetics Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, Calif (J.I.R.); and Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute, Oakland, Calif (R.M.K.).

Correspondence to Daniel I. Chasman, Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 900 Commonwealth Ave E, Boston, MA 02215. E-mail dchasman@rics.bwh.harvard.edu

Abstract

Background— Genome-wide genetic association analysis represents an opportunity for a comprehensive survey of the genes governing lipid metabolism, potentially revealing new insights or even therapeutic strategies for cardiovascular disease and related metabolic disorders.

Methods and Results— We have performed large-scale, genome-wide genetic analysis among 6382 white women with replication in 2 cohorts of 970 additional white men and women for associations between common single-nucleotide polymorphisms and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoprotein (Apo) A1, and ApoB. Genome-wide associations (P<5×10−8) were found at the PCSK9 gene, the APOB gene, the LPLgene, the APOA1-APOA5 locus, the LIPC gene, the CETP gene, the LDLR gene, and the APOE locus. In addition, genome-wide associations with triglycerides at the GCKRgene confirm and extend emerging links between glucose and lipid metabolism. Still other genome-wide associations at the 1p13.3 locus are consistent with emerging biological properties for a region of the genome, possibly related to the SORT1 gene. Below genome-wide significance, our study provides confirmatory evidence for associations at 5 novel loci with low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, or triglycerides reported recently in separate genome-wide association studies. The total proportion of variance explained by common variation at the genome-wide candidate loci ranges from 4.3% for triglycerides to 12.6% for ApoB.

Conclusion— Genome-wide associations at the GCKR gene and near the SORT1gene, as well as confirmatory associations at 5 additional novel loci, suggest emerging biological pathways for lipid metabolism among white women.

 SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2008; 1: 21-30

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.108.773168

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Atrioventricular (AV) Conduction Disease (block): Human Mutations affecting the Voltage Clock

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Human mutations affecting the voltage clock

  • (SCN5A and HCN4),

  • calcium clock (RYR2 and CASQ2), or both mechanisms

  • (ANKB) have been identified that negatively affect sinus node function.37,38

Diseases of Conduction Block Conduction block can occur at any level of the cardiac conduction system (CCS) and can manifest as sinoatrial exit block, atrioventricular block, infra-Hisian block, or bundle branch block. Impaired conduction can be caused by ion channel defects that alter action potential shape or by defective coupling between cardiomyocytes. Inherited defects in cardiac conduction have been linked to mutations in SCN5A and SCN1B (both affect phase 0) and KCNJ2 (affects phase 3 and 4). 

The cardiac sodium channel consists of the pore-forming α-subunit (encoded by SCN5A) and a modulatory β-subunit (encoded by SCN1B). The α-subunit contains a voltage sensor that allows for rapid activation in response to membrane depolarization. After depolarization, the sodium channel undergoes a period of inactivation, in which it is refractory to further impulses. SCN5A requires membrane repolarization to relieve the inactivated state. The inward rectifier potassium channel, Kir2.1, encoded by KCNJ2, maintains the resting membrane potential. Therefore, proper functioning of Nav1.5 and Kir2.1 is necessary for normal cardiac excitability.

SCN5A

Progressive cardiac conduction defect, or Lev-Lenègre disease, is characterized by age-related, fibrosclerotic degeneration of the His-Purkinje system.6 Impulse propagation through the proximal ventricular conduction system progressively declines, resulting in bundle branch blocks and eventually complete atrioventricular block. An inherited form of Lev-Lenègre disease is associated with loss of function mutations in SCN5A and can exist alone or as overlap syndromes with Brugada or long QT syndrome 3.6 Inherited progressive cardiac conduction defect is associated with a high risk of complete atrioventricular block and Stoke-Adams syncope without ventricular dysrhythmia.7 Schott et al8 identified a mutation in SCN5A that cosegregates with Lenègre disease in a large French family. Affected individuals had variable degrees of conduction block requiring pacemaker implantation in 4 family members because of syncope or complete heart block. Linkage analysis and candidate gene sequencing identified a T>C substitution at position +2 of the donor splice site of intron 22 (IVS22+2 T>C), which results in a mutant lacking the voltage-sensitive segment.8 Functional analysis demonstrated no transient inward sodium current in response to depolarization, consistent with a loss-of-function mutation.6

SCN1B

The majority of patients with Brugada and conduction disease do not have SCN5Amutations. Therefore, modifiers of Nav1.5 expression or function have become the target of candidate gene sequencing approaches. Watanabe et al9 identified SCN1B mutations in 3 families with conduction disease with or without Brugada syndrome. Coexpression of mutant β-subunits with Nav1.5 resulted in diminished sodium current.

KCNJ2

Mutations in KCNJ2 have been found in a rare autosomal dominant condition called Andersen-Tawil syndrome, characterized by periodic paralysis, dysmorphic features, polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, and cardiac conduction disease.10,11 ECG evaluation of 96 patients with Andersen-Tawil syndrome from 33 unrelated kindreds revealed conduction defects at multiple levels from the atrioventricular node to the distal conduction system.55 Cardiomyocytes expressing a dominant-negative subunit of Kir2.1 exhibited a 95% reduction in IK1, resulting in significant action potential prolongation. Mouse models of Andersen-Tawil syndrome exhibited a slower heart rate and significant slowing of conduction.56,57

Therapeutic Strategies

The current standard of care for symptomatic bradycardia due to conduction system disease is the implantation of an electronic pacemaker. Despite their success, electronic pacemakers have limitations, which include lead complications, finite battery life, potential for infection, lack of autonomic responsiveness, and size restriction in younger patients. These limitations have spurred on the development of biological pacemakers, the premise of which is to restore pacemaking activity with the use of viral-based or stem cell–based gene delivery systems.99 The identification and characterization of genes involved in generating pacemaker currents have allowed biological pacemaker technology to become a reality.

The restoration of sinus pacing rates can be achieved by modulating inward and outward currents to establish or increase the slope of diastolic depolarization in cardiac tissue. Increasing inward currents and/or decreasing outward currents increase the slope of diastolic depolarization and therefore the pacing rate. Genes that have been investigated or are under current investigation include the following: (1) β2-adrenergic receptor,100,101(2) dominant-negative Kir2.1 mutants,102 (3) adenylate cyclase type VI (ACVI),103,104and (4) HCN channels.105 The β2-adrenergic receptor and adenylate cyclase type VI both increase cAMP levels, leading to activation of endogenous HCN channels and calcium clock mechanisms. Although initial animal models using the β2-adrenergic receptor showed promise with transient increases in heart rate, the potential for proarrhythmia and the inability of this approach to establish de novo pacemaker activity limited its efficacy.101

Another approach focused on modifying ionic currents that convert working myocardial cells, which have relatively stable diastolic potentials, into cells with phase 4 diastolic depolarization. It was postulated that atrial and ventricular myocytes have the potential for automaticity, but that hyperpolarizing currents, such as IK1, prevent diastolic depolarization by stabilizing the resting membrane potential. Miake et al102 confirmed this hypothesis when they demonstrated that adenoviral delivery of a dominant-negative Kir2.1 construct into the left ventricle of guinea pigs resulted in conversion of quiescent myocytes into pacemaker cells. Unfortunately, significant action potential prolongation limited the clinical utility of this treatment strategy.102

Rosen and colleagues105,106 demonstrated that automaticity could be induced in quiescent myocardium with the use of heterologous expression of HCN channels that produce the pacemaker current If. Qu and Plotnikov et al demonstrated that stable autonomous rhythms could be generated when adenovirus encoding HCN2 was injected into the left atrium105 or left bundle branch106 of a canine heart. To bypass the limitations of viral-based systems, such as host immune response, several groups reported the successful use of cell-based delivery systems. Plotnikov et al107 reported the successful implantation of human mesenchymal stem cells expressing HCN2 in the left ventricle of a canine model of atrioventricular block. Dogs maintained stable ectopic pacemaker activity for >6 weeks without the use of immunosuppression.107 Human mesenchymal stem cells electronically couple to host myocardium through gap junctions; therefore, conditions with significant gap junction remodeling may affect the efficacy of this method.

Although standalone biological pacemakers may be far into the future, adjuvant biological pacemakers may find real-world utility for current deficiencies of electronic pacemakers, such as limited battery life and device infections. For example, biological preparations used in conjunction with device therapy may be used to extend battery life, decreasing the frequency of generator changes. Transient injectable pacemakers may also function as bridge therapy after lead extraction of an infected device. The need for adjuvant biological pacemakers is clear, but continued refinement of gene- and cell-based delivery systems will be necessary to make this technology a reality.99

Conclusion

Although rare, inherited arrhythmias have become an invaluable tool in identifying the genetic determinants of CCS function. Each new mutation enhances our understanding and appreciation of the biochemical and structural complexity needed for cardiac impulse generation and propagation. This methodology is hampered, however, by the relative scarcity of inherited conditions affecting the CCS. The addition of genome-wide association studies has broadened this search for novel genes beyond rare familial afflictions to include common, multifactorial conditions. It is hoped that this exciting new frontier will bring to light the complex interplay of genes and genetic/epigenetic modifiers that influence the prevalence of common diseases. These genetic screens will ultimately yield a bevy of new gene targets for pharmaceutical or gene-based therapeutics of the future.

REFERENCES

http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/123/8/904 [Circulation.2011; 123: 904-915 doi: 10.1161/​CIRCULATIONAHA.110.942284]

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15372490

 

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North Americans With Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy: Genomics of Ventricular arrhythmias, A-Fib, Right Ventricular Dysplasia, Cardiomyopathy – Comprehensive Desmosome Mutation Analysis

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Genomics of Ventricular arrhythmias, A-Fib, Right Ventricular Dysplasia, Cardiomyopathy – Comprehensive Desmosome Mutation Analysis in North Americans With Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy

A. Dénise den Haan, MD, Boon Yew Tan, MBChB, Michelle N. Zikusoka, MD, Laura Ibañez Lladó, MS, Rahul Jain, MD, Amy Daly, MS, Crystal Tichnell, MGC, Cynthia James, PhD, Nuria Amat-Alarcon, MS, Theodore Abraham, MD, Stuart D. Russell, MD,David A. Bluemke, MD, PhD, Hugh Calkins, MD, Darshan Dalal, MD, PhD and Daniel P. Judge, MD

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine/Cardiology (A.D.d.H., B.Y.T., M.N.Z., L.I.L., R.J., A.D., C.T., C.J., N.A.-A., T.A., S.D.R., H.C., D.D., D.P.J.), Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md; Department of Cardiology, Division of Heart and Lungs (A.D.d.H.), University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands; and National Institutes of Health, Radiology and Imaging Sciences (D.A.B.), Bethesda, Md.

Correspondence to Daniel P. Judge, MD, Johns Hopkins University, Division of Cardiology, Ross 1049; 720 Rutland Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21205. E-mail djudge@jhmi.edu

Abstract

Background— Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) is an inherited disorder typically caused by mutations in components of the cardiac desmosome. The prevalence and significance of desmosome mutations among patients with ARVD/C in North America have not been described previously. We report comprehensive desmosome genetic analysis for 100 North Americans with clinically confirmed or suspected ARVD/C.

Methods and Results— In 82 individuals with ARVD/C and 18 people with suspected ARVD/C, DNA sequence analysis was performed on PKP2, DSG2, DSP, DSC2, and JUP. In those with ARVD/C, 52% harbored a desmosome mutation. A majority of these mutations occurred in PKP2. Notably, 3 of the individuals studied have a mutation in more than 1 gene. Patients with a desmosome mutation were more likely to have experienced ventricular tachycardia (73% versus 44%), and they presented at a younger age (33 versus 41 years) compared with those without a desmosome mutation. Men with ARVD/C were more likely than women to carry a desmosome mutation (63% versus 38%). A mutation was identified in 5 of 18 patients (28%) with suspected ARVD. In this smaller subgroup, there were no significant phenotypic differences identified between individuals with a desmosome mutation compared with those without a mutation.

Conclusions— Our study shows that in 52% of North Americans with ARVD/C a mutation in one of the cardiac desmosome genes can be identified. Compared with those without a desmosome gene mutation, individuals with a desmosome gene mutation had earlier-onset ARVD/C and were more likely to have ventricular tachycardia.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2009; 2: 428-435

Published online before print June 3, 2009,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.109.858217

 

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Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology: 1700 MIs and 2300 coronary heart disease events among about 29 000 eligible patients: Design of Prospective Meta-Analyses of Genome-Wide Association Studies From 5 Cohorts

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium

Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology: 1700 MIs and 2300 coronary heart disease events among about 29 000 eligible patients: Design of Prospective Meta-Analyses of Genome-Wide Association Studies From 5 Cohorts

Bruce M. Psaty, MD, PhD, Christopher J. O’Donnell, MD, MPH, Vilmundur Gudnason, MD, PhD, Kathryn L. Lunetta, PhD, Aaron R. Folsom, MD, Jerome I. Rotter, MD,André G. Uitterlinden, PhD, Tamara B. Harris, MD, Jacqueline C.M. Witteman, PhD,Eric Boerwinkle, PhD and on Behalf of the CHARGE Consortium

Author Affiliations

From the Cardiovascular Health Research Unit, Departments of Medicine, Epidemiology, and Health Services (B.M.P.), University of Wash; Center for Health Studies, Group Health (B.M.P.), Seattle, Wash; the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the Framingham Heart Study (C.J.O.D.), Framingham, Mass; Icelandic Heart Association and the Department of Cardiovascular Genetics (Y.G.), University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland; Department of Biostatistics (K.L.), Boston University School of Public Health, Mass; Division of Epidemiology and Community Health (A.R.F.), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Medical Genetics Institute (J.I.R.), Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, Calif; Departments of Internal Medicine (A.G.U.) and Epidemiology (A.G.U., J.C.M.W.), Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Laboratory of Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry (T.B.H.), Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, Md; and Human Genetics Center and Division of Epidemiology (E.B.), University of Texas, Houston.

Guest editor for this article was Elizabeth R. Hauser, PhD.

Abstract

Background— The primary aim of genome-wide association studies is to identify novel genetic loci associated with interindividual variation in the levels of risk factors, the degree of subclinical disease, or the risk of clinical disease. The requirement for large sample sizes and the importance of replication have served as powerful incentives for scientific collaboration.

Methods— The Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium was formed to facilitate genome-wide association studies meta-analyses and replication opportunities among multiple large population-based cohort studies, which collect data in a standardized fashion and represent the preferred method for estimating disease incidence. The design of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium includes 5 prospective cohort studies from the United States and Europe: the Age, Gene/Environment Susceptibility—Reykjavik Study, the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study. With genome-wide data on a total of about 38 000 individuals, these cohort studies have a large number of health-related phenotypes measured in similar ways. For each harmonized trait, within-cohort genome-wide association study analyses are combined by meta-analysis. A prospective meta-analysis of data from all 5 cohorts, with a properly selected level of genome-wide statistical significance, is a powerful approach to finding genuine phenotypic associations with novel genetic loci.

Conclusions— The Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium and collaborating non-member studies or consortia provide an excellent framework for the identification of the genetic determinants of risk factors, subclinical-disease measures, and clinical events.

Example of Coronary Heart Disease

The cohort-study methods papers provide detail about many of the phenotypes listed in Table 2. For coronary heart disease, investigators knowledgeable about the phenotype in each study decided to focus on fatal and nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) as the primary outcome because the MI criteria differed in only trivial ways among the studies. There were some minor differences in the definition of the composite outcome of MI, fatal coronary heart disease, and sudden death, which became the secondary outcome. Only subjects at risk for an incident event were included in the analysis. MI survivors whose DNA was drawn after the event were not eligible. The primary analysis was restricted to Europeans or European Americans. Patients entered the analysis at the time of the DNA blood draw, and were followed until an event, death, loss to follow up, or the last visit. The main recommendations of the Analysis Committee were adopted, and a threshold of 5×10−8 was selected for genome-wide statistical significance. Analyses in progress include about 1700 MIs and 2300 coronary heart disease events among about 29 000 eligible patients. Each cohort conducted its own analysis, and results were uploaded to a secure share site for the fixed-effects meta-analysis. Even with this number of events (Supplemental Figure 2), power is good for only for relatively high minor allele frequencies (>0.25) and large relative risks (>1.3).

The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data. All authors have read and agree to the manuscript as written.

Discussion

In thousands of published papers, the 5 CHARGE cohort studies and many of the collaborating studies have already characterized the risk factors for and the incidence and prognosis of a variety of aging-related and cardiovascular conditions. The analysis of the incident MI, for instance, is free from the survival bias typically associated with cross-sectional or case-control studies. The methodologic advantages of the prospective population-based cohort design, the similarity of phenotypes across 5 studies, the availability of genome-wide genotyping data in each cohort, and the need for large sample sizes to provide reliable estimates of genotype-phenotype associations have served as the primary incentives for the formation of the CHARGE consortium, which includes GWAS data on about 38 000 individuals. The consortium effort relies on collaborative methods that are similar to those used by the individual contributing cohorts.

Phenotype experts who know the studies and the data well are responsible for phenotype-standardization across cohorts. The coordinated prospectively planned meta-analyses of CHARGE provide results that are virtually identical to a cohort-adjusted pooled analysis of individual level data. This approach–the within-study analysis followed by a between-study meta-analysis–avoids the human subjects issues associated with individual-level data sharing.

Editors, reviewers, and readers expect replication as the standard in science.6 The finding of a genetic association in one population with evidence for replication in multiple independent populations provides moderate assurance against false-positive reports and helps to establish the validity of the original finding. In a single experiment, the discovery-replication structure is traditionally embodied in a 2-stage design. The CHARGE consortium includes up to 5 independent replicate samples as well as additional collaborating studies for some phenotype working groups, so that it would have been possible to set up analysis plans within CHARGE to mimic the traditional 2-stage design for replication. For instance, the 2 largest cohorts could have served as the discovery set and the others as the replication set. However, attaining the extremely small probability values expected in GWAS requires large sample sizes. For any phenotype, a prospective meta-analysis of all participating cohorts, with a properly selected level of genome-wide statistical significance to minimize the chance of false-positives, is the most powerful approach to finding new genuine associations for genetic loci.25 When findings narrowly miss the prespecified significance threshold, genotyping individuals in other independent populations provides additional evidence about the association. For findings that substantially exceed pre-established significance thresholds, the results of a CHARGE meta-analysis effectively provide evidence of a multistudy replication.

The effort to assemble and manage the CHARGE consortium has provided some interesting and unanticipated challenges. Participating cohorts often had relationships with outside study groups that predated the formation of CHARGE. Timelines for genotyping and imputation have shifted. Purchases of new computer systems for the volume of work were sometimes necessary. Each cohort came to the consortium with their own traditions for methods of analysis, organization, and authorship policies that, while appropriate for their own work, were not always optimal for collaboration with multiple external groups. Within each cohort, the investigators had often formed working groups that divided up the large number of available phenotypes in ways that made sense locally but did not necessarily match the configuration that had been adopted by other cohorts. The Research Steering Committee has attempted to create a set of CHARGE working groups that accommodate the needs and the conventions of the various cohorts. Transparency, disclosure, and professional collaborative behavior by all participating investigators have been essential to the process.

Resource limitations are another challenge. Grant applications that funded the original single-study genome-wide genotyping effort typically imagined a much simpler design. The CHS whole-genome study had as its primary aim, for instance, the analysis of data on 3 endpoints, coronary disease, stroke and heart failure. With a score of active phenotype working groups, the CHARGE collaboration broadened the scope of the short-term work well beyond initial expectations for all the participating cohorts.

One of the premier challenges has been communications among scores of investigators at a dozen sites. CHS and ARIC are themselves multi-site studies. To be successful, the CHARGE collaboration has required effective communications: (1) within each cohort; (2) between cohorts; (3) within the CHARGE working groups; and (4) among the major CHARGE committees. In addition to the traditional methods of conference calls and email, the CHARGE “wiki,” set up by Dr J. Bis (Seattle, Wash), has provided a crucial and highly functional user-driven website for calendars, minutes, guidelines, working group analysis plans, manuscript proposals, and other documents. In the end, there is no substitute for face-to-face meetings, especially at the beginning of the collaboration, and this complex meta-organization has benefited from several CHARGE-wide meetings.

The major emerging opportunity is the collaboration with other studies and consortia. Many working groups have already incorporated nonmember studies into their efforts. Several working groups have coordinated submissions of initial manuscripts with the parallel submission of manuscripts from other studies or consortia. Several working groups have embarked on plans for joint meta-analyses between CHARGE and other consortia. CHARGE has tried to acknowledge and reward the efforts of champions, who assume leadership responsibility for moving these large complex projects forward and who are often hard-working young investigators, the key to the future success of population science.

The CHARGE Consortium represents an innovative model of collaborative research conducted by research teams that know well the strengths, the limitations, and the data from 5 prospective population-based cohort studies. By leveraging the dense genotyping, deep phenotyping and the diverse expertise, prospective meta-analyses are underway to identify and replicate the major common genetic determinants of risk factors, measures of subclinical disease, and clinical events for cardiovascular disease and aging.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2009; 2: 73-80

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.108.829747

 

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Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Genes with Subclinical Atherosclerosis in American Indians: Genetic Variants Study and Gene-Family Analysis

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Joint Associations of 61 Genetic Variants in the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Genes with Subclinical Atherosclerosis in American Indians – A Gene-Family Analysis

Jingyun Yang, PhD*Yun Zhu, MS*Elisa T. Lee, PhD, Ying Zhang, PhD, Shelley A. Cole, PhD, Karin Haack, PhD, Lyle G. Best, BS MD, Richard B. Devereux, MD, Mary J. Roman, MD, Barbara V. Howard, PhD and Jinying Zhao, MD, PhD

Author Affiliations

From the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA (J.Y., Y. Zhu, J.Z.); Center for American Indian Health Research, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK (E.T.L., Y. Zhang); Texas Biomedical Research Institute, San Antonio, TX (S.A.C., K.H.); Missouri Breaks Industries Research Inc, Timber Lake, SD (L.G.B.); The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY (R.B.D., M.J.R.); MedStar Health Research Institute, Hyattsville, MD (B.V.H.); and Georgetown and Howard Universities Centers for Translational Sciences, Washington, DC (B.V.H.).

Correspondence to Jinying Zhao, MD, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, 1440 Canal St, SL18, New Orleans, LA 70112. E-mail jzhao5@tulane.edu

* These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Background—Atherosclerosis is the underlying cause of cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in all American populations, including American Indians. Genetic factors play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Although a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) may explain only a small portion of variability in disease, the joint effect of multiple variants in a pathway on disease susceptibility could be large.

Methods and Results—Using a gene-family analysis, we investigated the joint associations of 61 tag SNPs in 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor genes with subclinical atherosclerosis, as measured by carotid intima-media thickness and plaque score, in 3665 American Indians from 94 families recruited by the Strong Heart Family Study (SHFS). Although multiple SNPs showed marginal association with intima-media thickness and plaque score individually, only a few survived adjustments for multiple testing. However, simultaneously modeling of the joint effect of all 61 SNPs in 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor genes revealed significant association of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene family with both intima-media thickness and plaque score independent of known coronary risk factors.

Conclusions—Genetic variants in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene family jointly contribute to subclinical atherosclerosis in American Indians who participated in the SHFS. These variants may influence the susceptibility of atherosclerosis through pathways other than cigarette smoking per se.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2013; 6: 89-96

Published online before print December 22, 2012,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.112.963967

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Atherosclerosis Risk and Highly Sensitive Cardiac Troponin-T Levels in European Americans and Blacks: Genome-Wide Variation Association Study

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Association of Genome-Wide Variation With Highly Sensitive Cardiac Troponin-T Levels in European Americans and Blacks

A Meta-Analysis From Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities and Cardiovascular Health Studies

Bing Yu, MD, MSc, Maja Barbalic, PhD, Ariel Brautbar, MD, Vijay Nambi, MD, Ron C. Hoogeveen, PhD, Weihong Tang, PhD, Thomas H. Mosley, PhD, Jerome I. Rotter, MD,Christopher R. deFilippi, MD, Christopher J. O’Donnell, MD, Sekar Kathiresan, MD,Ken Rice, PhD, Susan R. Heckbert, MD, PhD, Christie M. Ballantyne, MD, Bruce M. Psaty, MD, PhD and Eric Boerwinkle, PhD on behalf of the CARDIoGRAM Consortium

Author Affiliations

From the Human Genetic Center, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX (B.Y., M.B., E.B.); Deptartment of Medicine (A.B., V.N., R.C.H., C.M.B.), and Human Genome Sequencing Center (E.B.), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX; Department of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN (W.T.); Division of Geriatrics, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS (T.H.M.); Medical Genetics Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA (J.I.R.); School of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD (C.R.D.); National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and Framingham Heart Study, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD (C.J.O.D.); Center for Human Genetic Research & Cardiovascular Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (S.K.); Department of Biostatistics (K.R.), and Cardiovascular Health Research Unit & Department of Epidemiology (S.R.H.), University of Washington, Seattle, WA; and Cardiovascular Health Research Unit, Departments of Medicine, Epidemiology, and Health Services, University of Washington & Group Health Research Institute, Group Health Cooperative, Seattle, WA (B.M.P.).

Correspondence to Eric Boerwinkle, PhD, Human Genetic Center, University of Texas School of Public Health, 1200 Herman Pressler E-447, Houston, TX 77030. E-mailEric.Boerwinkle@uth.tmc.edu

Abstract

Background—High levels of cardiac troponin T, measured by a highly sensitive assay (hs-cTnT), are strongly associated with incident coronary heart disease and heart failure. To date, no large-scale genome-wide association study of hs-cTnT has been reported. We sought to identify novel genetic variants that are associated with hs-cTnT levels.

Methods and Results—We performed a genome-wide association in 9491 European Americans and 2053 blacks free of coronary heart disease and heart failure from 2 prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study and the Cardiovascular Health Study. Genome-wide association studies were conducted in each study and race stratum. Fixed-effect meta-analyses combined the results of linear regression from 2 cohorts within each race stratum and then across race strata to produce overall estimates and probability values. The meta-analysis identified a significant association at chromosome 8q13 (rs10091374;P=9.06×10−9) near the nuclear receptor coactivator 2 (NCOA2) gene. Overexpression of NCOA2 can be detected in myoblasts. An additional analysis using logistic regression and the clinically motivated 99th percentile cut point detected a significant association at 1q32 (rs12564445; P=4.73×10−8) in the gene TNNT2, which encodes the cardiac troponin T protein itself. The hs-cTnT-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms were not associated with coronary heart disease in a large case-control study, but rs12564445 was significantly associated with incident heart failure in Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study European Americans (hazard ratio=1.16; P=0.004).

Conclusions—We identified 2 loci, near NCOA2 and in the TNNT2 gene, at which variation was significantly associated with hs-cTnT levels. Further use of the new assay should enable replication of these results.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2013; 6: 82-88

Published online before print December 16, 2012,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.112.963058

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Atrial Fibrillation: IL6R Polymorphism in Whites and African Americans

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Large-Scale Candidate Gene Analysis in Whites and African Americans Identifies IL6R Polymorphism in Relation to Atrial Fibrillation

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s Candidate Gene Association Resource (CARe) Project

Renate B. Schnabel, MD, MSc*Kathleen F. Kerr, PhD*Steven A. Lubitz, MD*,Ermeg L. Alkylbekova, MD*Gregory M. Marcus, MD, MAS, Moritz F. Sinner, MD,Jared W. Magnani, MD, Philip A. Wolf, MD, Rajat Deo, MD, Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, ScM, Kathryn L. Lunetta, PhD, Reena Mehra, MD, MS, Daniel Levy, MD, Ervin R. Fox, MD, MPH, Dan E. Arking, PhD, Thomas H. Mosley, PhD, Martina Müller-Nurasyid, MSc, PhD, Taylor R. Young, MA, H.-Erich Wichmann, MD, PhD, Sudha Seshadri, MD,Deborah N. Farlow, PhD, Jerome I. Rotter, MD, Elsayed Z. Soliman, MD, MSc, MS,Nicole L. Glazer, PhD, James G. Wilson, MD, Monique M.B. Breteler, MD, Nona Sotoodehnia, MD, MPH, Christopher Newton-Cheh, MD, MPH, Stefan Kääb, MD, PhD,Patrick T. Ellinor, MD, PhD*Alvaro Alonso, MD*Emelia J. Benjamin, MD, ScM*,Susan R. Heckbert, MD, PhD* and for the Candidate Gene Association Resource (CARe) Atrial Fibrillation/Electrocardiography Working Group

Correspondence to Susan R. Heckbert, MD, PhD, Cardiovascular Health Research Unit, University of Washington, 1730 Minor Ave, Suite 1360, Seattle, WA 98101. E-mail heckbert@u.washington.edu; Emelia J. Benjamin, MD, ScM, Medicine andEpidemiology, Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health, The Framingham Heart Study, 73 Mount Wayte Ave, Framingham, MA 01702–5827. E-mail emelia@bu.edu; Renate B. Schnabel, MD, MSc, Department of Medicine 2, Cardiology, Johannes Gutenberg University, Langenbeckstr 1, 55131 Mainz, Germany. E-mail schnabelr@gmx.de

* These authors contributed equally to the manuscript.

Abstract

Background—The genetic background of atrial fibrillation (AF) in whites andAfrican Americans is largely unknown. Genes in cardiovascular pathways have not been systematically investigated.

Methods and Results—We examined a panel of approximately 50 000 common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 2095 cardiovascular candidate genesand AF in 3 cohorts with participants of European (n=18 524; 2260 cases) or African American descent (n=3662; 263 cases) in the National Heart, Lung, andBlood Institute’s Candidate Gene Association Resource. Results in whites were followed up in the German Competence Network for AF (n=906, 468 cases). The top result was assessed in relation to incident ischemic stroke in the Cohorts for Heartand Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Stroke Consortium (n=19 602 whites, 1544 incident strokes). SNP rs4845625 in the IL6R gene was associated with AF (relative risk [RR] C allele, 0.90; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.85–0.95;P=0.0005) in whites but did not reach statistical significance in African Americans (RR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.72–1.03; P=0.09). The results were comparable in the German AF Network replication, (RR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.57–0.89; P=0.003). No association between rs4845625 and stroke was observed in whites. The known chromosome 4 locus near PITX2 in whites also was associated with AF in African Americans (rs4611994; hazard ratio, 1.40; 95% CI, 1.16–1.69; P=0.0005).

Conclusions—In a community-based cohort meta-analysis, we identified genetic association in IL6R with AF in whites. Additionally, we demonstrated that the chromosome 4 locus known from recent genome-wide association studies in whites is associated with AF in African Americans.

 SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2011; 4: 557-564

Published online before print August 16, 2011,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.110.959197

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Genetics of Hypertension in African Americans – Gene Association Study

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Genome-Wide Association Study of Cardiac Structure and Systolic Function in African Americans – The Candidate Gene Association Resource (CARe) Study

Ervin R. Fox, MD*Solomon K. Musani, PhD*Maja Barbalic, PhD*Honghuang Lin, PhD, Bing Yu, MS, Kofo O. Ogunyankin, MD, Nicholas L. Smith, PhD, Abdullah Kutlar, MD, Nicole L. Glazer, MD, Wendy S. Post, MD, MS, Dina N. Paltoo, PhD, MPH, Daniel L. Dries, MD, MPH, Deborah N. Farlow, PhD, Christine W. Duarte, PhD, Sharon L. Kardia, PhD, Kristin J. Meyers, PhD, Yan V. Sun, PhD, Donna K. Arnett, PhD, Amit A. Patki, MS, Jin Sha, MS, Xiangqui Cui, PhD, Tandaw E. Samdarshi, MD, MPH, Alan D. Penman, PhD, Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, MD, PhD, Petra Bůžková, PhD, Emelia J. Benjamin, MD, David A. Bluemke, MD, PhD, Alanna C. Morrison, PhD, Gerardo Heiss, MD, J. Jeffrey Carr, MD, MSc, Russell P. Tracy, PhD, Thomas H. Mosley, PhD, Herman A. Taylor, MD, Bruce M. Psaty, MD, PhD, Susan R. Heckbert, MD, PhD, Thomas P. Cappola, MD, ScM and Ramachandran S. Vasan, MD

Author Affiliations

Guest Editor for this article was Barry London, MD, PhD.

Correspondence to Ervin Fox, MD MPH, FAHA, FACC, Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 North State St, Jackson, MS 39216. E-mail efox@medicine.umsmed.edu

* These authors contributed equally as joint first authors.

Abstract

Background—Using data from 4 community-based cohorts of African Americans, we tested the association between genome-wide markers (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) and cardiac phenotypes in the Candidate-gene Association Resource study.

Methods and Results—Among 6765 African Americans, we related age, sex, height, and weight-adjusted residuals for 9 cardiac phenotypes (assessed by echocardiogram or magnetic resonance imaging) to 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms genotyped using Genome-wide Affymetrix Human SNP Array 6.0 (Affy6.0) and the remainder imputed. Within the cohort, genome-wide association analysis was conducted, followed by meta-analysis across cohorts using inverse variance weights (genome-wide significance threshold=4.0 ×107). Supplementary pathway analysis was performed. We attempted replication in 3 smaller cohorts of African ancestry and tested lookups in 1 consortium of European ancestry (EchoGEN). Across the 9 phenotypes, variants in 4 genetic loci reached genome-wide significance: rs4552931 in UBE2V2 (P=1.43×107) for left ventricular mass, rs7213314 in WIPI1 (P=1.68×107) for left ventricular internal diastolic diameter, rs1571099 in PPAPDC1A (P=2.57×108) for interventricular septal wall thickness, and rs9530176 in KLF5 (P=4.02×107) for ejection fraction. Associated variants were enriched in 3 signaling pathways involved in cardiac remodeling. None of the 4 loci replicated in cohorts of African ancestry was confirmed in lookups in EchoGEN.

Conclusions—In the largest genome-wide association study of cardiac structure and function to date in African Americans, we identified 4 genetic loci related to left ventricular mass, interventricular septal wall thickness, left ventricular internal diastolic diameter, and ejection fraction, which reached genome-wide significance. Replication results suggest that these loci may be unique to individuals of African ancestry. Additional large-scale studies are warranted for these complex phenotypes.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics. 2013; 6: 37-46

Published online before print December 28, 2012,

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.111.962365

 

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