@article {7595, title = {Genetic Interactions with Age, Sex, Body Mass Index, and Hypertension in Relation to Atrial Fibrillation: The AFGen Consortium.}, journal = {Sci Rep}, volume = {7}, year = {2017}, month = {2017 Sep 12}, pages = {11303}, abstract = {

It is unclear whether genetic markers interact with risk factors to influence atrial fibrillation (AF) risk. We performed genome-wide interaction analyses between genetic variants and age, sex, hypertension, and body mass index in the AFGen Consortium. Study-specific results were combined using meta-analysis (88,383 individuals of European descent, including 7,292 with AF). Variants with nominal interaction associations in the discovery analysis were tested for association in four independent studies (131,441 individuals, including 5,722 with AF). In the discovery analysis, the AF risk associated with the minor rs6817105 allele (at the PITX2 locus) was greater among subjects <= 65 years of age than among those > 65 years (interaction p-value = 4.0 {\texttimes} 10-5). The interaction p-value exceeded genome-wide significance in combined discovery and replication analyses (interaction p-value = 1.7 {\texttimes} 10-8). We observed one genome-wide significant interaction with body mass index and several suggestive interactions with age, sex, and body mass index in the discovery analysis. However, none was replicated in the independent sample. Our findings suggest that the pathogenesis of AF may differ according to age in individuals of European descent, but we did not observe evidence of statistically significant genetic interactions with sex, body mass index, or hypertension on AF risk.

}, issn = {2045-2322}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-017-09396-7}, author = {Weng, Lu-Chen and Lunetta, Kathryn L and M{\"u}ller-Nurasyid, Martina and Smith, Albert Vernon and Th{\'e}riault, S{\'e}bastien and Weeke, Peter E and Barnard, John and Bis, Joshua C and Lyytik{\"a}inen, Leo-Pekka and Kleber, Marcus E and Martinsson, Andreas and Lin, Henry J and Rienstra, Michiel and Trompet, Stella and Krijthe, Bouwe P and D{\"o}rr, Marcus and Klarin, Derek and Chasman, Daniel I and Sinner, Moritz F and Waldenberger, Melanie and Launer, Lenore J and Harris, Tamara B and Soliman, Elsayed Z and Alonso, Alvaro and Par{\'e}, Guillaume and Teixeira, Pedro L and Denny, Joshua C and Shoemaker, M Benjamin and Van Wagoner, David R and Smith, Jonathan D and Psaty, Bruce M and Sotoodehnia, Nona and Taylor, Kent D and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Nikus, Kjell and Delgado, Graciela E and Melander, Olle and Engstr{\"o}m, Gunnar and Yao, Jie and Guo, Xiuqing and Christophersen, Ingrid E and Ellinor, Patrick T and Geelhoed, Bastiaan and Verweij, Niek and Macfarlane, Peter and Ford, Ian and Heeringa, Jan and Franco, Oscar H and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and V{\"o}lker, Uwe and Teumer, Alexander and Rose, Lynda M and K{\"a}{\"a}b, Stefan and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Arking, Dan E and Conen, David and Roden, Dan M and Chung, Mina K and Heckbert, Susan R and Benjamin, Emelia J and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and M{\"a}rz, Winfried and Smith, J Gustav and Rotter, Jerome I and van der Harst, Pim and Jukema, J Wouter and Stricker, Bruno H and Felix, Stephan B and Albert, Christine M and Lubitz, Steven A} } @article {7396, title = {Large-scale analyses of common and rare variants identify 12 new loci associated with atrial fibrillation.}, journal = {Nat Genet}, volume = {49}, year = {2017}, month = {2017 Jun}, pages = {946-952}, abstract = {

Atrial fibrillation affects more than 33 million people worldwide and increases the risk of stroke, heart failure, and death. Fourteen genetic loci have been associated with atrial fibrillation in European and Asian ancestry groups. To further define the genetic basis of atrial fibrillation, we performed large-scale, trans-ancestry meta-analyses of common and rare variant association studies. The genome-wide association studies (GWAS) included 17,931 individuals with atrial fibrillation and 115,142 referents; the exome-wide association studies (ExWAS) and rare variant association studies (RVAS) involved 22,346 cases and 132,086 referents. We identified 12 new genetic loci that exceeded genome-wide significance, implicating genes involved in cardiac electrical and structural remodeling. Our results nearly double the number of known genetic loci for atrial fibrillation, provide insights into the molecular basis of atrial fibrillation, and may facilitate the identification of new potential targets for drug discovery.

}, issn = {1546-1718}, doi = {10.1038/ng.3843}, author = {Christophersen, Ingrid E and Rienstra, Michiel and Roselli, Carolina and Yin, Xiaoyan and Geelhoed, Bastiaan and Barnard, John and Lin, Honghuang and Arking, Dan E and Smith, Albert V and Albert, Christine M and Chaffin, Mark and Tucker, Nathan R and Li, Molong and Klarin, Derek and Bihlmeyer, Nathan A and Low, Siew-Kee and Weeke, Peter E and M{\"u}ller-Nurasyid, Martina and Smith, J Gustav and Brody, Jennifer A and Niemeijer, Maartje N and D{\"o}rr, Marcus and Trompet, Stella and Huffman, Jennifer and Gustafsson, Stefan and Schurmann, Claudia and Kleber, Marcus E and Lyytik{\"a}inen, Leo-Pekka and Sepp{\"a}l{\"a}, Ilkka and Malik, Rainer and Horimoto, Andrea R V R and Perez, Marco and Sinisalo, Juha and Aeschbacher, Stefanie and Th{\'e}riault, S{\'e}bastien and Yao, Jie and Radmanesh, Farid and Weiss, Stefan and Teumer, Alexander and Choi, Seung Hoan and Weng, Lu-Chen and Clauss, Sebastian and Deo, Rajat and Rader, Daniel J and Shah, Svati H and Sun, Albert and Hopewell, Jemma C and Debette, Stephanie and Chauhan, Ganesh and Yang, Qiong and Worrall, Bradford B and Par{\'e}, Guillaume and Kamatani, Yoichiro and Hagemeijer, Yanick P and Verweij, Niek and Siland, Joylene E and Kubo, Michiaki and Smith, Jonathan D and Van Wagoner, David R and Bis, Joshua C and Perz, Siegfried and Psaty, Bruce M and Ridker, Paul M and Magnani, Jared W and Harris, Tamara B and Launer, Lenore J and Shoemaker, M Benjamin and Padmanabhan, Sandosh and Haessler, Jeffrey and Bartz, Traci M and Waldenberger, Melanie and Lichtner, Peter and Arendt, Marina and Krieger, Jose E and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Risch, Lorenz and Mansur, Alfredo J and Peters, Annette and Smith, Blair H and Lind, Lars and Scott, Stuart A and Lu, Yingchang and Bottinger, Erwin B and Hernesniemi, Jussi and Lindgren, Cecilia M and Wong, Jorge A and Huang, Jie and Eskola, Markku and Morris, Andrew P and Ford, Ian and Reiner, Alex P and Delgado, Graciela and Chen, Lin Y and Chen, Yii-Der Ida and Sandhu, Roopinder K and Li, Man and Boerwinkle, Eric and Eisele, Lewin and Lannfelt, Lars and Rost, Natalia and Anderson, Christopher D and Taylor, Kent D and Campbell, Archie and Magnusson, Patrik K and Porteous, David and Hocking, Lynne J and Vlachopoulou, Efthymia and Pedersen, Nancy L and Nikus, Kjell and Orho-Melander, Marju and Hamsten, Anders and Heeringa, Jan and Denny, Joshua C and Kriebel, Jennifer and Darbar, Dawood and Newton-Cheh, Christopher and Shaffer, Christian and Macfarlane, Peter W and Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie and Almgren, Peter and Huang, Paul L and Sotoodehnia, Nona and Soliman, Elsayed Z and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Hofman, Albert and Franco, Oscar H and V{\"o}lker, Uwe and J{\"o}ckel, Karl-Heinz and Sinner, Moritz F and Lin, Henry J and Guo, Xiuqing and Dichgans, Martin and Ingelsson, Erik and Kooperberg, Charles and Melander, Olle and Loos, Ruth J F and Laurikka, Jari and Conen, David and Rosand, Jonathan and van der Harst, Pim and Lokki, Marja-Liisa and Kathiresan, Sekar and Pereira, Alexandre and Jukema, J Wouter and Hayward, Caroline and Rotter, Jerome I and M{\"a}rz, Winfried and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Stricker, Bruno H and Chung, Mina K and Felix, Stephan B and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Alonso, Alvaro and Roden, Dan M and K{\"a}{\"a}b, Stefan and Chasman, Daniel I and Heckbert, Susan R and Benjamin, Emelia J and Tanaka, Toshihiro and Lunetta, Kathryn L and Lubitz, Steven A and Ellinor, Patrick T} } @article {7811, title = {Multi-ethnic genome-wide association study for atrial fibrillation.}, journal = {Nat Genet}, volume = {50}, year = {2018}, month = {2018 Sep}, pages = {1225-1233}, abstract = {

Atrial fibrillation (AF) affects more than 33 million individuals worldwide and has a complex heritability. We conducted the largest meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for AF to date, consisting of more than half a million individuals, including 65,446 with AF. In total, we identified 97 loci significantly associated with AF, including 67 that were novel in a combined-ancestry analysis, and 3 that were novel in a European-specific analysis. We sought to identify AF-associated genes at the GWAS loci by performing RNA-sequencing and expression quantitative trait locus analyses in 101 left atrial samples, the most relevant tissue for AF. We also performed transcriptome-wide analyses that identified 57 AF-associated genes, 42 of which overlap with GWAS loci. The identified loci implicate genes enriched within cardiac developmental, electrophysiological, contractile and structural pathways. These results extend our understanding of the biological pathways underlying AF and may facilitate the development of therapeutics for AF.

}, issn = {1546-1718}, doi = {10.1038/s41588-018-0133-9}, author = {Roselli, Carolina and Chaffin, Mark D and Weng, Lu-Chen and Aeschbacher, Stefanie and Ahlberg, Gustav and Albert, Christine M and Almgren, Peter and Alonso, Alvaro and Anderson, Christopher D and Aragam, Krishna G and Arking, Dan E and Barnard, John and Bartz, Traci M and Benjamin, Emelia J and Bihlmeyer, Nathan A and Bis, Joshua C and Bloom, Heather L and Boerwinkle, Eric and Bottinger, Erwin B and Brody, Jennifer A and Calkins, Hugh and Campbell, Archie and Cappola, Thomas P and Carlquist, John and Chasman, Daniel I and Chen, Lin Y and Chen, Yii-Der Ida and Choi, Eue-Keun and Choi, Seung Hoan and Christophersen, Ingrid E and Chung, Mina K and Cole, John W and Conen, David and Cook, James and Crijns, Harry J and Cutler, Michael J and Damrauer, Scott M and Daniels, Brian R and Darbar, Dawood and Delgado, Graciela and Denny, Joshua C and Dichgans, Martin and D{\"o}rr, Marcus and Dudink, Elton A and Dudley, Samuel C and Esa, Nada and Esko, T{\~o}nu and Eskola, Markku and Fatkin, Diane and Felix, Stephan B and Ford, Ian and Franco, Oscar H and Geelhoed, Bastiaan and Grewal, Raji P and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Guo, Xiuqing and Gupta, Namrata and Gustafsson, Stefan and Gutmann, Rebecca and Hamsten, Anders and Harris, Tamara B and Hayward, Caroline and Heckbert, Susan R and Hernesniemi, Jussi and Hocking, Lynne J and Hofman, Albert and Horimoto, Andrea R V R and Huang, Jie and Huang, Paul L and Huffman, Jennifer and Ingelsson, Erik and Ipek, Esra Gucuk and Ito, Kaoru and Jimenez-Conde, Jordi and Johnson, Renee and Jukema, J Wouter and K{\"a}{\"a}b, Stefan and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Kamatani, Yoichiro and Kane, John P and Kastrati, Adnan and Kathiresan, Sekar and Katschnig-Winter, Petra and Kavousi, Maryam and Kessler, Thorsten and Kietselaer, Bas L and Kirchhof, Paulus and Kleber, Marcus E and Knight, Stacey and Krieger, Jose E and Kubo, Michiaki and Launer, Lenore J and Laurikka, Jari and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Leineweber, Kirsten and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Li, Man and Lim, Hong Euy and Lin, Henry J and Lin, Honghuang and Lind, Lars and Lindgren, Cecilia M and Lokki, Marja-Liisa and London, Barry and Loos, Ruth J F and Low, Siew-Kee and Lu, Yingchang and Lyytik{\"a}inen, Leo-Pekka and Macfarlane, Peter W and Magnusson, Patrik K and Mahajan, Anubha and Malik, Rainer and Mansur, Alfredo J and Marcus, Gregory M and Margolin, Lauren and Margulies, Kenneth B and M{\"a}rz, Winfried and McManus, David D and Melander, Olle and Mohanty, Sanghamitra and Montgomery, Jay A and Morley, Michael P and Morris, Andrew P and M{\"u}ller-Nurasyid, Martina and Natale, Andrea and Nazarian, Saman and Neumann, Benjamin and Newton-Cheh, Christopher and Niemeijer, Maartje N and Nikus, Kjell and Nilsson, Peter and Noordam, Raymond and Oellers, Heidi and Olesen, Morten S and Orho-Melander, Marju and Padmanabhan, Sandosh and Pak, Hui-Nam and Par{\'e}, Guillaume and Pedersen, Nancy L and Pera, Joanna and Pereira, Alexandre and Porteous, David and Psaty, Bruce M and Pulit, Sara L and Pullinger, Clive R and Rader, Daniel J and Refsgaard, Lena and Ribas{\'e}s, Marta and Ridker, Paul M and Rienstra, Michiel and Risch, Lorenz and Roden, Dan M and Rosand, Jonathan and Rosenberg, Michael A and Rost, Natalia and Rotter, Jerome I and Saba, Samir and Sandhu, Roopinder K and Schnabel, Renate B and Schramm, Katharina and Schunkert, Heribert and Schurman, Claudia and Scott, Stuart A and Sepp{\"a}l{\"a}, Ilkka and Shaffer, Christian and Shah, Svati and Shalaby, Alaa A and Shim, Jaemin and Shoemaker, M Benjamin and Siland, Joylene E and Sinisalo, Juha and Sinner, Moritz F and Slowik, Agnieszka and Smith, Albert V and Smith, Blair H and Smith, J Gustav and Smith, Jonathan D and Smith, Nicholas L and Soliman, Elsayed Z and Sotoodehnia, Nona and Stricker, Bruno H and Sun, Albert and Sun, Han and Svendsen, Jesper H and Tanaka, Toshihiro and Tanriverdi, Kahraman and Taylor, Kent D and Teder-Laving, Maris and Teumer, Alexander and Th{\'e}riault, S{\'e}bastien and Trompet, Stella and Tucker, Nathan R and Tveit, Arnljot and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and van der Harst, Pim and Van Gelder, Isabelle C and Van Wagoner, David R and Verweij, Niek and Vlachopoulou, Efthymia and V{\"o}lker, Uwe and Wang, Biqi and Weeke, Peter E and Weijs, Bob and Weiss, Raul and Weiss, Stefan and Wells, Quinn S and Wiggins, Kerri L and Wong, Jorge A and Woo, Daniel and Worrall, Bradford B and Yang, Pil-Sung and Yao, Jie and Yoneda, Zachary T and Zeller, Tanja and Zeng, Lingyao and Lubitz, Steven A and Lunetta, Kathryn L and Ellinor, Patrick T} } @article {7973, title = {Assessment of the Relationship Between Genetic Determinants of Thyroid Function and Atrial Fibrillation: A Mendelian Randomization Study.}, journal = {JAMA Cardiol}, year = {2019}, month = {2019 Jan 23}, abstract = {

Importance: Increased free thyroxine (FT4) and decreased thyrotropin are associated with increased risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) in observational studies, but direct involvement is unclear.

Objective: To evaluate the potential direct involvement of thyroid traits on AF.

Design, Setting, and Participants: Study-level mendelian randomization (MR) included 11 studies, and summary-level MR included 55 114 AF cases and 482 295 referents, all of European ancestry.

Exposures: Genomewide significant variants were used as instruments for standardized FT4 and thyrotropin levels within the reference range, standardized triiodothyronine (FT3):FT4 ratio, hypothyroidism, standardized thyroid peroxidase antibody levels, and hyperthyroidism. Mendelian randomization used genetic risk scores in study-level analysis or individual single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 2-sample MR for the summary-level data.

Main Outcomes and Measures: Prevalent and incident AF.

Results: The study-level analysis included 7679 individuals with AF and 49 233 referents (mean age [standard error], 62 [3] years; 15 859 men [29.7\%]). In study-level random-effects meta-analysis, the pooled hazard ratio of FT4 levels (nanograms per deciliter) for incident AF was 1.55 (95\% CI, 1.09-2.20; P = .02; I2 = 76\%) and the pooled odds ratio (OR) for prevalent AF was 2.80 (95\% CI, 1.41-5.54; P = .003; I2 = 64\%) in multivariable-adjusted analyses. The FT4 genetic risk score was associated with an increase in FT4 by 0.082 SD (standard error, 0.007; P < .001) but not with incident AF (risk ratio, 0.84; 95\% CI, 0.62-1.14; P = .27) or prevalent AF (OR, 1.32; 95\% CI, 0.64-2.73; P = .46). Similarly, in summary-level inverse-variance weighted random-effects MR, gene-based FT4 within the reference range was not associated with AF (OR, 1.01; 95\% CI, 0.89-1.14; P = .88). However, gene-based increased FT3:FT4 ratio, increased thyrotropin within the reference range, and hypothyroidism were associated with AF with inverse-variance weighted random-effects OR of 1.33 (95\% CI, 1.08-1.63; P = .006), 0.88 (95\% CI, 0.84-0.92; P < .001), and 0.94 (95\% CI, 0.90-0.99; P = .009), respectively, and robust to tests of horizontal pleiotropy. However, the subset of hypothyroidism single-nucleotide polymorphisms involved in autoimmunity and thyroid peroxidase antibodies levels were not associated with AF. Gene-based hyperthyroidism was associated with AF with MR-Egger OR of 1.31 (95\% CI, 1.05-1.63; P = .02) with evidence of horizontal pleiotropy (P = .045).

Conclusions and Relevance: Genetically increased FT3:FT4 ratio and hyperthyroidism, but not FT4 within the reference range, were associated with increased AF, and increased thyrotropin within the reference range and hypothyroidism were associated with decreased AF, supporting a pathway involving the pituitary-thyroid-cardiac axis.

}, issn = {2380-6591}, doi = {10.1001/jamacardio.2018.4635}, author = {Ellervik, Christina and Roselli, Carolina and Christophersen, Ingrid E and Alonso, Alvaro and Pietzner, Maik and Sitlani, Collen M and Trompet, Stella and Arking, Dan E and Geelhoed, Bastiaan and Guo, Xiuqing and Kleber, Marcus E and Lin, Henry J and Lin, Honghuang and Macfarlane, Peter and Selvin, Elizabeth and Shaffer, Christian and Smith, Albert V and Verweij, Niek and Weiss, Stefan and Cappola, Anne R and D{\"o}rr, Marcus and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Heckbert, Susan and Mooijaart, Simon and M{\"a}rz, Winfried and Psaty, Bruce M and Ridker, Paul M and Roden, Dan and Stott, David J and V{\"o}lzke, Henry and Benjamin, Emelia J and Delgado, Graciela and Ellinor, Patrick and Homuth, Georg and K{\"o}ttgen, Anna and Jukema, Johan W and Lubitz, Steven A and Mora, Samia and Rienstra, Michiel and Rotter, Jerome I and Shoemaker, M Benjamin and Sotoodehnia, Nona and Taylor, Kent D and van der Harst, Pim and Albert, Christine M and Chasman, Daniel I} }