39 research outputs found

    Impact of Adding a Single Allele in the 9p21 Locus to Traditional Risk Factors on Reclassification of Coronary Heart Disease Risk and Implications for Lipid-Modifying Therapy in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study

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    A single nucleotide polymorphism on chromosome 9p21, rs10757274 (9p21 allele), has been shown to predict coronary heart disease (CHD) in whites. We evaluated whether adding the 9p21 allele to traditional risk factors (RF) improved CHD risk prediction in whites from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study, and whether changes in risk prediction would modify lipid therapy recommendations

    The 9p21 genetic variant is additive to carotid intima media thickness and plaque in improving coronary heart disease risk prediction in white participants of the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study

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    We evaluated whether the addition of carotid intima media thickness and plaque (CIMT-P), and, a single nucleotide polymorphism on chromosome 9p21 (9p21) together improve coronary heart disease (CHD) risk prediction in the ARIC study

    Associations Between Lipoprotein(a) Levels and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Black and White Subjects: The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study

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    Based on studies with limited statistical power, lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is not considered a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD) in African Americans. We evaluated associations between Lp(a) and incident CVD events in African Americans and Caucasians in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study

    Knowledge-Driven Analysis Identifies a Gene–Gene Interaction Affecting High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Levels in Multi-Ethnic Populations

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    Total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglyceride, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels are among the most important risk factors for coronary artery disease. We tested for gene–gene interactions affecting the level of these four lipids based on prior knowledge of established genome-wide association study (GWAS) hits, protein–protein interactions, and pathway information. Using genotype data from 9,713 European Americans from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study, we identified an interaction between HMGCR and a locus near LIPC in their effect on HDL-C levels (Bonferroni corrected Pc = 0.002). Using an adaptive locus-based validation procedure, we successfully validated this gene–gene interaction in the European American cohorts from the Framingham Heart Study (Pc = 0.002) and the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA; Pc = 0.006). The interaction between these two loci is also significant in the African American sample from ARIC (Pc = 0.004) and in the Hispanic American sample from MESA (Pc = 0.04). Both HMGCR and LIPC are involved in the metabolism of lipids, and genome-wide association studies have previously identified LIPC as associated with levels of HDL-C. However, the effect on HDL-C of the novel gene–gene interaction reported here is twice as pronounced as that predicted by the sum of the marginal effects of the two loci. In conclusion, based on a knowledge-driven analysis of epistasis, together with a new locus-based validation method, we successfully identified and validated an interaction affecting a complex trait in multi-ethnic populations

    Analysis of multiple association studies provides evidence of an expression QTL hub in gene-gene interaction network affecting HDL cholesterol levels.

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    Epistasis has been suggested to underlie part of the missing heritability in genome-wide association studies. In this study, we first report an analysis of gene-gene interactions affecting HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) levels in a candidate gene study of 2,091 individuals with mixed dyslipidemia from a clinical trial. Two additional studies, the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study (ARIC; n = 9,713) and the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA; n = 2,685), were considered for replication. We identified a gene-gene interaction between rs1532085 and rs12980554 (P = 7.1 × 10(-7)) in their effect on HDL-C levels, which is significant after Bonferroni correction (P(c) = 0.017) for the number of SNP pairs tested. The interaction successfully replicated in the ARIC study (P = 7.0 × 10(-4); P(c) = 0.02). Rs1532085, an expression QTL (eQTL) of LIPC, is one of the two SNPs involved in another, well-replicated gene-gene interaction underlying HDL-C levels. To further investigate the role of this eQTL SNP in gene-gene interactions affecting HDL-C, we tested in the ARIC study for interaction between this SNP and any other SNP genome-wide. We found the eQTL to be involved in a few suggestive interactions, one of which significantly replicated in MESA. Importantly, these gene-gene interactions, involving only rs1532085, explain an additional 1.4% variation of HDL-C, on top of the 0.65% explained by rs1532085 alone. LIPC plays a key role in the lipid metabolism pathway and it, and rs1532085 in particular, has been associated with HDL-C and other lipid levels. Collectively, we discovered several novel gene-gene interactions, all involving an eQTL of LIPC, thus suggesting a hub role of LIPC in the gene-gene interaction network that regulates HDL-C levels, which in turn raises the hypothesis that LIPC's contribution is largely via interactions with other lipid metabolism related genes

    Rare LPL gene variants attenuate triglyceride reduction and HDL cholesterol increase in response to fenofibric acid therapy in individuals with mixed dyslipidemia

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    OBJECTIVE: Individuals with mixed dyslipidemia have elevated triglycerides (TG), low high-density lipo-protein cholesterol (HDL-C), and increased risk for coronary disease. Fibrate therapy is commonly used to lower TG and increase HDL-C. Common genetic variants are known to affect the response to fibrate therapy. We sought to identify rare genetic variants (frequency ≤ 1%) in genes involved in TG and HDL-C metabolism that affect the response to fenofibric acid (FA) therapy. METHODS: Four genes with a major role in HDL-C and TG metabolism APOA1, APOC2, APOC-III and LPL were sequenced in 2385 participants with mixed dyslipidemia in a randomized, double-blind, active-controlled study comparing therapy with FA alone, in combination with statins, or statin alone. Rare variants collapsing or SKAT methods were used for the analysis. RESULTS: Synonymous rare variants in the LPL gene were significantly associated with absolute HDL-C change (P = 9 × 10(−4)) and TG percent change (P = 6.76 × 10(−4)) in those treated with FA only. Participants with these rare variants had a 2 mg/dL increase in HDL-C and 39 mg/dL decrease in TG as compared to 6.2 mg/dL increase in HDL-C and 100 mg/dL decrease in TG in those without these variants. Rare variants in the APOC-III gene were associated with a modest 3 mg/dL less reduction in APOB (P = 8.72 × 10(−4)) in those receiving FA and statin. CONCLUSION: In individuals with mixed dyslipidemia rare synonymous variants within LPL gene were associated with attenuated response to FA therapy while APOCIII rare variants were associated with a modest effect on APOB response to FA-statin therapy. These results should be replicated in a similar clinical trial for further confirmation

    QQ plot and Box plot of the interactions identified in the RCG study.

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    <p><b>A</b>) QQ plot for interaction tests between all pairs of 304 candidate SNPs in RCG. <b>B</b>) Boxplot of HDL-C levels for the nine genotype combinations of rs1532085 and rs12980554, the pair of SNPs that exhibit the most significant gene-gene interaction in this study. The interaction is dominated by the combination of AA genotype in both SNPs.</p

    Top SNPs (FDR = 0.25) interacting with rs1532085 in affecting HDL-C levels in ARIC.

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    a<p>dbSNP build 137.</p>b<p>Difference in R square values between the model with the interaction and the model with SNP rs1532085 alone (for which R square is 0.65%), denoting the additional variance in HDL-C levels that is captured by the interaction alone.</p

    QQ plot for interaction tests between rs1532085 and genome-wide LD-pruned SNPs in the ARIC study.

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    <p>The plot and analysis in main text point to a deviation of the <i>P</i> values for four independent SNPs, which are detailed in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0092469#pone-0092469-t001" target="_blank">Table 1</a>.</p
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