%0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2009 %T Association of novel genetic Loci with circulating fibrinogen levels: a genome-wide association study in 6 population-based cohorts. %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Yang, Qiong %A Peters, Annette %A Basu, Saonli %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Baumert, Jens %A Lowe, Gordon D O %A McKnight, Barbara %A Tang, Weihong %A de Maat, Moniek %A Larson, Martin G %A Eyhermendy, Susana %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Lumley, Thomas %A Pankow, James S %A Hofman, Albert %A Massaro, Joseph M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Kolz, Melanie %A Taylor, Kent D %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Illig, Thomas %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Volcik, Kelly A %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Gieger, Christian %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Couper, David J %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Strachan, David P %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Folsom, Aaron R %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Fibrinogen %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Pedigree %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Young Adult %X

BACKGROUND: Fibrinogen is both central to blood coagulation and an acute-phase reactant. We aimed to identify common variants influencing circulation fibrinogen levels.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted a genome-wide association analysis on 6 population-based studies, the Rotterdam Study, the Framingham Heart Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Monitoring of Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Disease/KORA Augsburg Study, and the British 1958 Birth Cohort Study, including 22 096 participants of European ancestry. Four loci were marked by 1 or more single-nucleotide polymorphisms that demonstrated genome-wide significance (P<5.0 x 10(-8)). These included a single-nucleotide polymorphism located in the fibrinogen beta chain (FGB) gene and 3 single-nucleotide polymorphisms representing newly identified loci. The high-signal single-nucleotide polymorphisms were rs1800789 in exon 7 of FGB (P=1.8 x 10(-30)), rs2522056 downstream from the interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF1) gene (P=1.3 x 10(-15)), rs511154 within intron 1 of the propionyl coenzyme A carboxylase (PCCB) gene (P=5.9 x 10(-10)), and rs1539019 on the NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 isoforms (NLRP3) gene (P=1.04 x 10(-8)).

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlight biological pathways that may be important in regulation of inflammation underlying cardiovascular disease.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 2 %P 125-33 %8 2009 Apr %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20031576?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.108.825224 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2009 %T Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium: Design of prospective meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies from 5 cohorts. %A Psaty, Bruce M %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Harris, Tamara B %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %K Adult %K Aged %K Aging %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Heart Diseases %K Humans %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Middle Aged %K Phenotype %K Research Design %K Risk Factors %X

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.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 2 %P 73-80 %8 2009 Feb %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20031568?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.108.829747 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2009 %T Common variants at ten loci influence QT interval duration in the QTGEN Study. %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Rice, Kenneth M %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Yin, Xiaoyan %A Estrada, Karol %A Bis, Joshua C %A Marciante, Kristin %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Noseworthy, Peter A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kors, Jan A %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Hofman, Albert %A Heckbert, Susan R %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Lumley, Thomas %A Larson, Martin G %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %K Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing %K Adult %K Aged %K Arrhythmias, Cardiac %K Chromosome Mapping %K Death, Sudden, Cardiac %K Electroencephalography %K ERG1 Potassium Channel %K Ether-A-Go-Go Potassium Channels %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genetic Variation %K Genome, Human %K Humans %K KCNQ1 Potassium Channel %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Muscle Proteins %K NAV1.5 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated %K Risk Factors %K Sodium Channels %X

QT interval duration, reflecting myocardial repolarization on the electrocardiogram, is a heritable risk factor for sudden cardiac death and drug-induced arrhythmias. We conducted a meta-analysis of three genome-wide association studies in 13,685 individuals of European ancestry from the Framingham Heart Study, the Rotterdam Study and the Cardiovascular Health Study, as part of the QTGEN consortium. We observed associations at P < 5 x 10(-8) with variants in NOS1AP, KCNQ1, KCNE1, KCNH2 and SCN5A, known to be involved in myocardial repolarization and mendelian long-QT syndromes. Associations were found at five newly identified loci, including 16q21 near NDRG4 and GINS3, 6q22 near PLN, 1p36 near RNF207, 16p13 near LITAF and 17q12 near LIG3 and RFFL. Collectively, the 14 independent variants at these 10 loci explain 5.4-6.5% of the variation in QT interval. These results, together with an accompanying paper, offer insights into myocardial repolarization and suggest candidate genes that could predispose to sudden cardiac death and drug-induced arrhythmias.

%B Nat Genet %V 41 %P 399-406 %8 2009 Apr %G eng %N 4 %1 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19305408?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.364 %0 Journal Article %J JAMA %D 2009 %T Genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function: a meta-analysis and replication of genome-wide association data. %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Felix, Janine F %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Wild, Philipp S %A Felix, Stephan B %A Watzinger, Norbert %A Larson, Martin G %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Grosshennig, Anika %A Schillert, Arne %A Teumer, Alexander %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Lumley, Thomas %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A König, Inke R %A Zeller, Tanja %A Homuth, Georg %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Aragam, Jayashri %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Dörr, Marcus %A Zweiker, Robert %A Lind, Lars %A Rodeheffer, Richard J %A Greiser, Karin Halina %A Levy, Daniel %A Haritunians, Talin %A Deckers, Jaap W %A Stritzke, Jan %A Lackner, Karl J %A Völker, Uwe %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kullo, Iftikhar %A Haerting, Johannes %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Reffelmann, Thorsten %A Redfield, Margaret M %A Werdan, Karl %A Mitchell, Gary F %A Rice, Kenneth %A Arnett, Donna K %A Hofman, Albert %A Gottdiener, John S %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Blettner, Maria %A Friedrich, Nele %A Wang, Thomas J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Munzel, Thomas F %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Schmidt, Helena %A Völzke, Henry %A Blankenberg, Stefan %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Aorta %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Echocardiography %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Heart Atria %K Heart Ventricles %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Organ Size %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %K Ventricular Dysfunction, Left %K Ventricular Function, Left %X

CONTEXT: Echocardiographic measures of left ventricular (LV) structure and function are heritable phenotypes of cardiovascular disease.

OBJECTIVE: To identify common genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function by conducting a meta-analysis of genome-wide association data in 5 population-based cohort studies (stage 1) with replication (stage 2) in 2 other community-based samples.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Within each of 5 community-based cohorts comprising the EchoGen consortium (stage 1; n = 12 612 individuals of European ancestry; 55% women, aged 26-95 years; examinations between 1978-2008), we estimated the association between approximately 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs; imputed to the HapMap CEU panel) and echocardiographic traits. In stage 2, SNPs significantly associated with traits in stage 1 were tested for association in 2 other cohorts (n = 4094 people of European ancestry). Using a prespecified P value threshold of 5 x 10(-7) to indicate genome-wide significance, we performed an inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analysis of genome-wide association data from each cohort.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Echocardiographic traits: LV mass, internal dimensions, wall thickness, systolic dysfunction, aortic root, and left atrial size.

RESULTS: In stage 1, 16 genetic loci were associated with 5 echocardiographic traits: 1 each with LV internal dimensions and systolic dysfunction, 3 each with LV mass and wall thickness, and 8 with aortic root size. In stage 2, 5 loci replicated (6q22 locus associated with LV diastolic dimensions, explaining <1% of trait variance; 5q23, 12p12, 12q14, and 17p13 associated with aortic root size, explaining 1%-3% of trait variance).

CONCLUSIONS: We identified 5 genetic loci harboring common variants that were associated with variation in LV diastolic dimensions and aortic root size, but such findings explained a very small proportion of variance. Further studies are required to replicate these findings, identify the causal variants at or near these loci, characterize their functional significance, and determine whether they are related to overt cardiovascular disease.

%B JAMA %V 302 %P 168-78 %8 2009 Jul 08 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19584346?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1001/jama.2009.978-a %0 Journal Article %J N Engl J Med %D 2009 %T Genomewide association studies of stroke. %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Bis, Joshua C %A Fornage, Myriam %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Debette, Stephanie %A Lumley, Thomas %A Folsom, Aaron R %A van den Herik, Evita G %A Bos, Michiel J %A Beiser, Alexa %A Cushman, Mary %A Launer, Lenore J %A Shahar, Eyal %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Du, Yangchun %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Rosamond, Wayne D %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Kelly-Hayes, Margaret %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Coresh, Josef %A Hofman, Albert %A DeCarli, Charles %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Yang, Qiong %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Kase, Carlos S %A Rice, Kenneth %A Haritunians, Talin %A Roks, Gerwin %A de Kort, Paul L M %A Taylor, Kent D %A de Lau, Lonneke M %A Oostra, Ben A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Mosley, Thomas H %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Breteler, Monique M B %A Longstreth, W T %A Wolf, Philip A %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Aged %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 12 %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Markers %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proportional Hazards Models %K Risk Factors %K Stroke %X

BACKGROUND: The genes underlying the risk of stroke in the general population remain undetermined.

METHODS: We carried out an analysis of genomewide association data generated from four large cohorts composing the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium, including 19,602 white persons (mean [+/-SD] age, 63+/-8 years) in whom 1544 incident strokes (1164 ischemic strokes) developed over an average follow-up of 11 years. We tested the markers most strongly associated with stroke in a replication cohort of 2430 black persons with 215 incident strokes (191 ischemic strokes), another cohort of 574 black persons with 85 incident strokes (68 ischemic strokes), and 652 Dutch persons with ischemic stroke and 3613 unaffected persons.

RESULTS: Two intergenic single-nucleotide polymorphisms on chromosome 12p13 and within 11 kb of the gene NINJ2 were associated with stroke (P<5x10(-8)). NINJ2 encodes an adhesion molecule expressed in glia and shows increased expression after nerve injury. Direct genotyping showed that rs12425791 was associated with an increased risk of total (i.e., all types) and ischemic stroke, with hazard ratios of 1.30 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.19 to 1.42) and 1.33 (95% CI, 1.21 to 1.47), respectively, yielding population attributable risks of 11% and 12% in the discovery cohorts. Corresponding hazard ratios were 1.35 (95% CI, 1.01 to 1.79; P=0.04) and 1.42 (95% CI, 1.06 to 1.91; P=0.02) in the large cohort of black persons and 1.17 (95% CI, 1.01 to 1.37; P=0.03) and 1.19 (95% CI, 1.01 to 1.41; P=0.04) in the Dutch sample; the results of an underpowered analysis of the smaller black cohort were nonsignificant.

CONCLUSIONS: A genetic locus on chromosome 12p13 is associated with an increased risk of stroke.

%B N Engl J Med %V 360 %P 1718-28 %8 2009 Apr 23 %G eng %N 17 %1 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19369658?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1056/NEJMoa0900094 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2009 %T Genome-wide association study of blood pressure and hypertension. %A Levy, Daniel %A Ehret, Georg B %A Rice, Kenneth %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Launer, Lenore J %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Aspelund, Thor %A Aulchenko, Yurii %A Lumley, Thomas %A Köttgen, Anna %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Arking, Dan E %A Mitchell, Gary F %A Mattace-Raso, Francesco U S %A Smith, Albert V %A Taylor, Kent %A Scharpf, Robert B %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Bis, Joshua %A Harris, Tamara B %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Hofman, Albert %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Coresh, Josef %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Fox, Caroline S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Wang, Thomas J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Larson, Martin G %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %K Blood Pressure %K Cell Line %K Chromosome Mapping %K Chromosomes, Human %K Diastole %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Liver %K Lymphocytes %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Odds Ratio %K Phenotype %K Prevalence %K Risk Assessment %K Systole %X

Blood pressure is a major cardiovascular disease risk factor. To date, few variants associated with interindividual blood pressure variation have been identified and replicated. Here we report results of a genome-wide association study of systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure and hypertension in the CHARGE Consortium (n = 29,136), identifying 13 SNPs for SBP, 20 for DBP and 10 for hypertension at P < 4 × 10(-7). The top ten loci for SBP and DBP were incorporated into a risk score; mean BP and prevalence of hypertension increased in relation to the number of risk alleles carried. When ten CHARGE SNPs for each trait were included in a joint meta-analysis with the Global BPgen Consortium (n = 34,433), four CHARGE loci attained genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10(-8)) for SBP (ATP2B1, CYP17A1, PLEKHA7, SH2B3), six for DBP (ATP2B1, CACNB2, CSK-ULK3, SH2B3, TBX3-TBX5, ULK4) and one for hypertension (ATP2B1). Identifying genes associated with blood pressure advances our understanding of blood pressure regulation and highlights potential drug targets for the prevention or treatment of hypertension.

%B Nat Genet %V 41 %P 677-87 %8 2009 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19430479?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.384 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2009 %T Multiple loci associated with indices of renal function and chronic kidney disease. %A Köttgen, Anna %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Katz, Ronit %A Li, Man %A Yang, Qiong %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Launer, Lenore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Smith, Albert V %A Arking, Dan E %A Astor, Brad C %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Ehret, Georg B %A Ruczinski, Ingo %A Scharpf, Robert B %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A de Boer, Ian H %A Haritunians, Talin %A Lumley, Thomas %A Sarnak, Mark %A Siscovick, David %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Levy, Daniel %A Upadhyay, Ashish %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Paré, Guillaume %A Ridker, Paul M %A Kao, W H Linda %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Coresh, Josef %A Shlipak, Michael G %A Fox, Caroline S %K Chromosome Mapping %K Cohort Studies %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glomerular Filtration Rate %K Humans %K Kidney %K Kidney Failure, Chronic %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Mucoproteins %K Netherlands %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prevalence %K Uromodulin %X

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has a heritable component and is an important global public health problem because of its high prevalence and morbidity. We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to identify susceptibility loci for glomerular filtration rate, estimated by serum creatinine (eGFRcrea) and cystatin C (eGFRcys), and CKD (eGFRcrea < 60 ml/min/1.73 m(2)) in European-ancestry participants of four population-based cohorts (ARIC, CHS, FHS, RS; n = 19,877; 2,388 CKD cases), and tested for replication in 21,466 participants (1,932 CKD cases). We identified significant SNP associations (P < 5 × 10(-8)) with CKD at the UMOD locus, with eGFRcrea at UMOD, SHROOM3 and GATM-SPATA5L1, and with eGFRcys at CST and STC1. UMOD encodes the most common protein in human urine, Tamm-Horsfall protein, and rare mutations in UMOD cause mendelian forms of kidney disease. Our findings provide new insights into CKD pathogenesis and underscore the importance of common genetic variants influencing renal function and disease.

%B Nat Genet %V 41 %P 712-7 %8 2009 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19430482?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.377 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2009 %T Multiple loci influence erythrocyte phenotypes in the CHARGE Consortium. %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Zakai, Neil A %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Smith, Albert V %A Nalls, Michael A %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Köttgen, Anna %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Aspelund, Thor %A Yang, Qiong %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Jaffe, Andrew %A Bis, Joshua C M %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Teumer, Alexander %A Fox, Caroline S %A Guralnik, Jack M %A Ehret, Georg B %A Rice, Kenneth %A Felix, Janine F %A Rendon, Augusto %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Levy, Daniel %A Patel, Kushang V %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Hofman, Albert %A Sambrook, Jennifer G %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Zheng, Gang %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Coresh, Josef %A Lumley, Thomas %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vangils, Janine M %A Launer, Lenore J %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Oostra, Ben A %A Zwaginga, Jaap-Jan %A Ouwehand, Willem H %A Thein, Swee-Lay %A Meisinger, Christa %A Deloukas, Panos %A Nauck, Matthias %A Spector, Tim D %A Gieger, Christian %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Greinacher, Andreas %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Furth, Susan %A Cushman, Mary %A Harris, Tamara B %A Lin, Jing-Ping %K Blood Pressure %K Cell Line %K Cohort Studies %K Endothelial Cells %K Erythrocytes %K Gene Expression %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %X

Measurements of erythrocytes within the blood are important clinical traits and can indicate various hematological disorders. We report here genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for six erythrocyte traits, including hemoglobin concentration (Hb), hematocrit (Hct), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and red blood cell count (RBC). We performed an initial GWAS in cohorts of the CHARGE Consortium totaling 24,167 individuals of European ancestry and replication in additional independent cohorts of the HaemGen Consortium totaling 9,456 individuals. We identified 23 loci significantly associated with these traits in a meta-analysis of the discovery and replication cohorts (combined P values ranging from 5 x 10(-8) to 7 x 10(-86)). Our findings include loci previously associated with these traits (HBS1L-MYB, HFE, TMPRSS6, TFR2, SPTA1) as well as new associations (EPO, TFRC, SH2B3 and 15 other loci). This study has identified new determinants of erythrocyte traits, offering insight into common variants underlying variation in erythrocyte measures.

%B Nat Genet %V 41 %P 1191-8 %8 2009 Nov %G eng %N 11 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19862010?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.466 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2009 %T NRXN3 is a novel locus for waist circumference: a genome-wide association study from the CHARGE Consortium. %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Monda, Keri L %A Johansson, Asa %A Harris, Tamara B %A Fu, Mao %A Haritunians, Talin %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Garcia, Melissa %A Launer, Lenore J %A Smith, Albert V %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A McArdle, Patrick F %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Bielinski, Suzette J %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brancati, Fred %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Pankow, James S %A Arnold, Alice M %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Glazer, Nicole L %A McKnight, Barbara %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Amin, Najaf %A Campbell, Harry %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Rudan, Igor %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Vitart, Veronique %A Gao, Xiaoyi %A Kraja, Aldi %A Province, Michael A %A Zhang, Qunyuan %A Atwood, Larry D %A Dupuis, Josée %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Jaquish, Cashell E %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A White, Charles C %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Estrada, Karol %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Oostra, Ben A %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Fox, Caroline S %A North, Kari E %K Aged %K Body Mass Index %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Obesity %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Waist Circumference %X

Central abdominal fat is a strong risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease. To identify common variants influencing central abdominal fat, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association analysis for waist circumference (WC). In total, three loci reached genome-wide significance. In stage 1, 31,373 individuals of Caucasian descent from eight cohort studies confirmed the role of FTO and MC4R and identified one novel locus associated with WC in the neurexin 3 gene [NRXN3 (rs10146997, p = 6.4x10(-7))]. The association with NRXN3 was confirmed in stage 2 by combining stage 1 results with those from 38,641 participants in the GIANT consortium (p = 0.009 in GIANT only, p = 5.3x10(-8) for combined analysis, n = 70,014). Mean WC increase per copy of the G allele was 0.0498 z-score units (0.65 cm). This SNP was also associated with body mass index (BMI) [p = 7.4x10(-6), 0.024 z-score units (0.10 kg/m(2)) per copy of the G allele] and the risk of obesity (odds ratio 1.13, 95% CI 1.07-1.19; p = 3.2x10(-5) per copy of the G allele). The NRXN3 gene has been previously implicated in addiction and reward behavior, lending further evidence that common forms of obesity may be a central nervous system-mediated disorder. Our findings establish that common variants in NRXN3 are associated with WC, BMI, and obesity.

%B PLoS Genet %V 5 %P e1000539 %8 2009 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19557197?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000539 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2009 %T Variants in ZFHX3 are associated with atrial fibrillation in individuals of European ancestry. %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Arking, Dan E %A Pfeufer, Arne %A van Noord, Charlotte %A Smith, Albert V %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Bis, Joshua C %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Lubitz, Steven A %A D'Agostino, Ralph B %A Lumley, Thomas %A Ehret, Georg B %A Heeringa, Jan %A Aspelund, Thor %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Larson, Martin G %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Wang, Thomas J %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Levy, Daniel %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Li, Man %A Chamberlain, Alanna M %A Hofman, Albert %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Harris, Tamara B %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kao, W H Linda %A Agarwal, Sunil K %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Wang, Ke %A Launer, Lenore J %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wolf, Philip A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Köttgen, Anna %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Mueller, Martina %A Perz, Siegfried %A Steinbeck, Gerhard %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Kääb, Stefan %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 16 %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Homeodomain Proteins %K Humans %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Mutation %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Reproducibility of Results %X

We conducted meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies for atrial fibrillation (AF) in participants from five community-based cohorts. Meta-analyses of 896 prevalent (15,768 referents) and 2,517 incident (21,337 referents) AF cases identified a new locus for AF (ZFHX3, rs2106261, risk ratio RR = 1.19; P = 2.3 x 10(-7)). We replicated this association in an independent cohort from the German AF Network (odds ratio = 1.44; P = 1.6 x 10(-11); combined RR = 1.25; combined P = 1.8 x 10(-15)).

%B Nat Genet %V 41 %P 879-81 %8 2009 Aug %G eng %N 8 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19597492?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.416 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2010 %T Association of genome-wide variation with the risk of incident heart failure in adults of European and African ancestry: a prospective meta-analysis from the cohorts for heart and aging research in genomic epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium. %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Felix, Janine F %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Loehr, Laura R %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Lumley, Thomas %A Rosamond, Wayne D %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Bis, Joshua C %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Benjamin, Emelia %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Haritunians, Talin %A Couper, David %A Murabito, Joanne %A Wang, Ying A %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Gottdiener, John S %A Chang, Patricia P %A Wang, Thomas J %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Hofman, Albert %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Fox, Ervin R %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Willerson, James T %A Levy, Daniel %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %K African Americans %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cohort Studies %K Endopeptidases %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heart Failure %K Humans %K Incidence %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk %K Ubiquitin-Specific Proteases %X

BACKGROUND: Although genetic factors contribute to the onset of heart failure (HF), no large-scale genome-wide investigation of HF risk has been published to date. We have investigated the association of 2,478,304 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with incident HF by meta-analyzing data from 4 community-based prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Eligible participants for these analyses were of European or African ancestry and free of clinical HF at baseline. Each study independently conducted genome-wide scans and imputed data to the approximately 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in HapMap. Within each study, Cox proportional hazards regression models provided age- and sex-adjusted estimates of the association between each variant and time to incident HF. Fixed-effect meta-analyses combined results for each single-nucleotide polymorphism from the 4 cohorts to produce an overall association estimate and P value. A genome-wide significance P value threshold was set a priori at 5.0x10(-7). During a mean follow-up of 11.5 years, 2526 incident HF events (12%) occurred in 20 926 European-ancestry participants. The meta-analysis identified a genome-wide significant locus at chromosomal position 15q22 (1.4x10(-8)), which was 58.8 kb from USP3. Among 2895 African-ancestry participants, 466 incident HF events (16%) occurred during a mean follow-up of 13.7 years. One genome-wide significant locus was identified at 12q14 (6.7x10(-8)), which was 6.3 kb from LRIG3.

CONCLUSIONS: We identified 2 loci that were associated with incident HF and exceeded genome-wide significance. The findings merit replication in other community-based settings of incident HF.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 3 %P 256-66 %8 2010 Jun %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20445134?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.109.895763 %0 Journal Article %J Nature %D 2010 %T Biological, clinical and population relevance of 95 loci for blood lipids. %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Musunuru, Kiran %A Smith, Albert V %A Edmondson, Andrew C %A Stylianou, Ioannis M %A Koseki, Masahiro %A Pirruccello, James P %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Willer, Cristen J %A Johansen, Christopher T %A Fouchier, Sigrid W %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Peloso, Gina M %A Barbalic, Maja %A Ricketts, Sally L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Chambers, John %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Melander, Olle %A Johnson, Toby %A Li, Xiaohui %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Li, Mingyao %A Shin Cho, Yoon %A Jin Go, Min %A Jin Kim, Young %A Lee, Jong-Young %A Park, Taesung %A Kim, Kyunga %A Sim, Xueling %A Twee-Hee Ong, Rick %A Croteau-Chonka, Damien C %A Lange, Leslie A %A Smith, Joshua D %A Song, Kijoung %A Hua Zhao, Jing %A Yuan, Xin %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lamina, Claudia %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zee, Robert Y L %A Wright, Alan F %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Wilson, James F %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Whitfield, John B %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Waeber, Gérard %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Vitart, Veronique %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Uda, Manuela %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Thompson, John R %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Surakka, Ida %A Stringham, Heather M %A Spector, Tim D %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Smit, Johannes H %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Silander, Kaisa %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Scuteri, Angelo %A Scott, James %A Schlessinger, David %A Sanna, Serena %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Saharinen, Juha %A Sabatti, Chiara %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Rudan, Igor %A Rose, Lynda M %A Roberts, Robert %A Rieder, Mark %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Pichler, Irene %A Perola, Markus %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Parker, Alex N %A Paré, Guillaume %A Oostra, Ben A %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Nieminen, Markku S %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Meitinger, Thomas %A McPherson, Ruth %A McCarthy, Mark I %A McArdle, Wendy %A Masson, David %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Marroni, Fabio %A Mangino, Massimo %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Lucas, Gavin %A Luben, Robert %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Lettre, Guillaume %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Laaksonen, Reijo %A Kyvik, Kirsten O %A Kronenberg, Florian %A König, Inke R %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kaplan, Lee M %A Johansson, Asa %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Janssens, A Cecile J W %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Igl, Wilmar %A Kees Hovingh, G %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Hofman, Albert %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Heid, Iris M %A Hayward, Caroline %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Harris, Tamara B %A Haritunians, Talin %A Hall, Alistair S %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Guiducci, Candace %A Groop, Leif C %A Gonzalez, Elena %A Gieger, Christian %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Elliott, Paul %A Ejebe, Kenechi G %A Döring, Angela %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Deloukas, Panagiotis %A de Geus, Eco J C %A de Faire, Ulf %A Crawford, Gabriel %A Collins, Francis S %A Chen, Yii-der I %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Campbell, Harry %A Burtt, Noel P %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Boekholdt, S Matthijs %A Bergman, Richard N %A Barroso, Inês %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Altshuler, David %A Seielstad, Mark %A Wong, Tien Y %A Tai, E-Shyong %A Feranil, Alan B %A Kuzawa, Christopher W %A Adair, Linda S %A Taylor, Herman A %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Gabriel, Stacey B %A Wilson, James G %A Holm, Hilma %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Tall, Alan R %A Hegele, Robert A %A Kastelein, John J P %A Schadt, Eric E %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Strachan, David P %A Mooser, Vincent %A Stefansson, Kari %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Sandhu, Manjinder S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rader, Daniel J %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Peltonen, Leena %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Boehnke, Michael %A Kathiresan, Sekar %K African Americans %K Animals %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Europe %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Lipid Metabolism %K Lipids %K Liver %K Male %K Mice %K N-Acetylgalactosaminyltransferases %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Protein Phosphatase 1 %K Reproducibility of Results %K Triglycerides %X

Plasma concentrations of total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides are among the most important risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) and are targets for therapeutic intervention. We screened the genome for common variants associated with plasma lipids in >100,000 individuals of European ancestry. Here we report 95 significantly associated loci (P < 5 x 10(-8)), with 59 showing genome-wide significant association with lipid traits for the first time. The newly reported associations include single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) near known lipid regulators (for example, CYP7A1, NPC1L1 and SCARB1) as well as in scores of loci not previously implicated in lipoprotein metabolism. The 95 loci contribute not only to normal variation in lipid traits but also to extreme lipid phenotypes and have an impact on lipid traits in three non-European populations (East Asians, South Asians and African Americans). Our results identify several novel loci associated with plasma lipids that are also associated with CAD. Finally, we validated three of the novel genes-GALNT2, PPP1R3B and TTC39B-with experiments in mouse models. Taken together, our findings provide the foundation to develop a broader biological understanding of lipoprotein metabolism and to identify new therapeutic opportunities for the prevention of CAD.

%B Nature %V 466 %P 707-13 %8 2010 Aug 05 %G eng %N 7307 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20686565?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/nature09270 %0 Journal Article %J Lancet %D 2010 %T Common genetic determinants of vitamin D insufficiency: a genome-wide association study. %A Wang, Thomas J %A Zhang, Feng %A Richards, J Brent %A Kestenbaum, Bryan %A van Meurs, Joyce B %A Berry, Diane %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Koller, Daniel L %A Peltonen, Leena %A Cooper, Jason D %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Houston, Denise K %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Peacock, Munro %A Shi, Julia %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Anneli, Pouta %A de Boer, Ian H %A Mangino, Massimo %A Kato, Bernet %A Smyth, Deborah J %A Booth, Sarah L %A Jacques, Paul F %A Burke, Greg L %A Goodarzi, Mark %A Cheung, Ching-Lung %A Wolf, Myles %A Rice, Kenneth %A Goltzman, David %A Hidiroglou, Nick %A Ladouceur, Martin %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Hart, Deborah %A Arden, Nigel K %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Malik, Suneil %A Fraser, William D %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Zhai, Guangju %A Macdonald, Helen M %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Reid, David M %A Hakim, Alan %A Dennison, Elaine %A Liu, Yongmei %A Power, Chris %A Stevens, Helen E %A Jaana, Laitinen %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Bojunga, Jörg %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Foroud, Tatiana %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofman, Albert %A Jansson, John-Olov %A Cauley, Jane A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Gibson, Quince %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Karasik, David %A Siscovick, David S %A Econs, Michael J %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Florez, Jose C %A Todd, John A %A Dupuis, Josée %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Spector, Timothy D %K Canada %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 11 %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4 %K Cohort Studies %K Dietary Supplements %K Europe %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heterozygote %K Homozygote %K Humans %K Immunoassay %K International Cooperation %K Linkage Disequilibrium %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Seasons %K United States %K Vitamin D %K Vitamin D Deficiency %X

BACKGROUND: Vitamin D is crucial for maintenance of musculoskeletal health, and might also have a role in extraskeletal tissues. Determinants of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations include sun exposure and diet, but high heritability suggests that genetic factors could also play a part. We aimed to identify common genetic variants affecting vitamin D concentrations and risk of insufficiency.

METHODS: We undertook a genome-wide association study of 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations in 33 996 individuals of European descent from 15 cohorts. Five epidemiological cohorts were designated as discovery cohorts (n=16 125), five as in-silico replication cohorts (n=9367), and five as de-novo replication cohorts (n=8504). 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay, chemiluminescent assay, ELISA, or mass spectrometry. Vitamin D insufficiency was defined as concentrations lower than 75 nmol/L or 50 nmol/L. We combined results of genome-wide analyses across cohorts using Z-score-weighted meta-analysis. Genotype scores were constructed for confirmed variants.

FINDINGS: Variants at three loci reached genome-wide significance in discovery cohorts for association with 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations, and were confirmed in replication cohorts: 4p12 (overall p=1.9x10(-109) for rs2282679, in GC); 11q12 (p=2.1x10(-27) for rs12785878, near DHCR7); and 11p15 (p=3.3x10(-20) for rs10741657, near CYP2R1). Variants at an additional locus (20q13, CYP24A1) were genome-wide significant in the pooled sample (p=6.0x10(-10) for rs6013897). Participants with a genotype score (combining the three confirmed variants) in the highest quartile were at increased risk of having 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations lower than 75 nmol/L (OR 2.47, 95% CI 2.20-2.78, p=2.3x10(-48)) or lower than 50 nmol/L (1.92, 1.70-2.16, p=1.0x10(-26)) compared with those in the lowest quartile.

INTERPRETATION: Variants near genes involved in cholesterol synthesis, hydroxylation, and vitamin D transport affect vitamin D status. Genetic variation at these loci identifies individuals who have substantially raised risk of vitamin D insufficiency.

FUNDING: Full funding sources listed at end of paper (see Acknowledgments).

%B Lancet %V 376 %P 180-8 %8 2010 Jul 17 %G eng %N 9736 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20541252?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60588-0 %0 Journal Article %J J Am Soc Nephrol %D 2010 %T Common genetic variants associate with serum phosphorus concentration. %A Kestenbaum, Bryan %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Köttgen, Anna %A Felix, Janine F %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lohman, Kurt %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Hausman, Dorothy B %A Petersen, Ann-Kristin %A Gieger, Christian %A Ried, Janina S %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Strom, Tim M %A Wichmann, H Erich %A Campbell, Harry %A Hayward, Caroline %A Rudan, Igor %A de Boer, Ian H %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Li, Man %A Arking, Dan E %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Coresh, Josef %A Yang, Qiong %A Levy, Daniel %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Shlipak, Michael G %A Kao, W H Linda %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Siscovick, David S %A Fox, Caroline S %K Adult %K Aged %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Fibroblast Growth Factors %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Kidney %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Phosphorus %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Receptors, Calcium-Sensing %K Sex Factors %K Sodium-Phosphate Cotransporter Proteins, Type IIa %X

Phosphorus is an essential mineral that maintains cellular energy and mineralizes the skeleton. Because complex actions of ion transporters and regulatory hormones regulate serum phosphorus concentrations, genetic variation may determine interindividual variation in phosphorus metabolism. Here, we report a comprehensive genome-wide association study of serum phosphorus concentration. We evaluated 16,264 participants of European ancestry from the Cardiovascular Heath Study, Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, Framingham Offspring Study, and the Rotterdam Study. We excluded participants with an estimated GFR <45 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) to focus on phosphorus metabolism under normal conditions. We imputed genotypes to approximately 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the HapMap and combined study-specific findings using meta-analysis. We tested top polymorphisms from discovery cohorts in a 5444-person replication sample. Polymorphisms in seven loci with minor allele frequencies 0.08 to 0.49 associate with serum phosphorus concentration (P = 3.5 x 10(-16) to 3.6 x 10(-7)). Three loci were near genes encoding the kidney-specific type IIa sodium phosphate co-transporter (SLC34A1), the calcium-sensing receptor (CASR), and fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), proteins that contribute to phosphorus metabolism. We also identified genes encoding phosphatases, kinases, and phosphodiesterases that have yet-undetermined roles in phosphorus homeostasis. In the replication sample, five of seven top polymorphisms associate with serum phosphorous concentrations (P < 0.05 for each). In conclusion, common genetic variants associate with serum phosphorus in the general population. Further study of the loci identified in this study may help elucidate mechanisms of phosphorus regulation.

%B J Am Soc Nephrol %V 21 %P 1223-32 %8 2010 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20558539?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1681/ASN.2009111104 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T Common variants in 22 loci are associated with QRS duration and cardiac ventricular conduction. %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Isaacs, Aaron %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Dörr, Marcus %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Nolte, Ilja M %A van der Harst, Pim %A Müller, Martina %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Hayward, Caroline %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Polasek, Ozren %A Giovannone, Steven %A Fu, Jingyuan %A Magnani, Jared W %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Gharib, Sina A %A Teumer, Alexander %A Li, Man %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Aspelund, Thor %A Köttgen, Anna %A Johnson, Toby %A Rice, Kenneth %A Sie, Mark P S %A Wang, Ying A %A Klopp, Norman %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Wild, Sarah H %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Estrada, Karol %A Völker, Uwe %A Wright, Alan F %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Qu, Jiaxiang %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Kors, Jan A %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Harris, Tamara B %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Oostra, Ben A %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Perz, Siegfried %A de Boer, Rudolf A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völzke, Henry %A Spector, Timothy D %A Liu, Fang-Yu %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Rotter, Jerome I %A van Herpen, Gé %A Levy, Daniel %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Kao, W H Linda %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Hofman, Albert %A Campbell, Harry %A Folsom, Aaron R %A van Veldhuisen, Dirk J %A Schwienbacher, Christine %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Volpato, Claudia Beu %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Connell, John M %A Launer, Lenore %A Lu, Xiaowen %A Franke, Lude %A Fehrmann, Rudolf S N %A te Meerman, Gerard %A Groen, Harry J M %A Weersma, Rinse K %A van den Berg, Leonard H %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Ophoff, Roel A %A Navis, Gerjan %A Rudan, Igor %A Snieder, Harold %A Wilson, James F %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Siscovick, David S %A Wang, Thomas J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Felix, Stephan B %A Fishman, Glenn I %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Kääb, Stefan %A Arking, Dan E %K Animals %K Animals, Newborn %K Chromosomes, Human %K Computational Biology %K Electrocardiography %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heart Conduction System %K Humans %K Mice %K Mice, Transgenic %K Models, Animal %K Myocytes, Cardiac %K NAV1.8 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Sodium Channels %X

The QRS interval, from the beginning of the Q wave to the end of the S wave on an electrocardiogram, reflects ventricular depolarization and conduction time and is a risk factor for mortality, sudden death and heart failure. We performed a genome-wide association meta-analysis in 40,407 individuals of European descent from 14 studies, with further genotyping in 7,170 additional Europeans, and we identified 22 loci associated with QRS duration (P < 5 × 10(-8)). These loci map in or near genes in pathways with established roles in ventricular conduction such as sodium channels, transcription factors and calcium-handling proteins, but also point to previously unidentified biologic processes, such as kinase inhibitors and genes related to tumorigenesis. We demonstrate that SCN10A, a candidate gene at the most significantly associated locus in this study, is expressed in the mouse ventricular conduction system, and treatment with a selective SCN10A blocker prolongs QRS duration. These findings extend our current knowledge of ventricular depolarization and conduction.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 1068-76 %8 2010 Dec %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21076409?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.716 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T Common variants in KCNN3 are associated with lone atrial fibrillation. %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Chung, Mina K %A Sinner, Moritz F %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Mueller, Martina %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Fox, Ervin %A Darbar, Dawood %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Beckmann, Britt-M %A van Noord, Charlotte %A Wang, Ke %A Ehret, Georg B %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Hazen, Stanley L %A Steinbeck, Gerhard %A Smith, Albert V %A Launer, Lenore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Makino, Seiko %A Nelis, Mari %A Milan, David J %A Perz, Siegfried %A Esko, Tõnu %A Köttgen, Anna %A Moebus, Susanne %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Li, Man %A Möhlenkamp, Stefan %A Wang, Thomas J %A Kao, W H Linda %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Nöthen, Markus M %A MacRae, Calum A %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Levy, Daniel %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Metspalu, Andres %A Topol, Eric J %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Roden, Dan M %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Barnard, John %A Arking, Dan E %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Kääb, Stefan %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Aged %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Case-Control Studies %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Introns %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Small-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels %K Young Adult %X

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia. Previous studies have identified several genetic loci associated with typical AF. We sought to identify common genetic variants underlying lone AF. This condition affects a subset of individuals without overt heart disease and with an increased heritability of AF. We report a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies conducted using 1,335 individuals with lone AF (cases) and 12,844 unaffected individuals (referents). Cases were obtained from the German AF Network, Heart and Vascular Health Study, the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cleveland Clinic and Massachusetts General Hospital. We identified an association on chromosome 1q21 to lone AF (rs13376333, adjusted odds ratio = 1.56; P = 6.3 x 10(-12)), and we replicated this association in two independent cohorts with lone AF (overall combined odds ratio = 1.52, 95% CI 1.40-1.64; P = 1.83 x 10(-21)). rs13376333 is intronic to KCNN3, which encodes a potassium channel protein involved in atrial repolarization.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 240-4 %8 2010 Mar %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20173747?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.537 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2010 %T Common variants in the calcium-sensing receptor gene are associated with total serum calcium levels. %A O'Seaghdha, Conall M %A Yang, Qiong %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Leak, Tennille S %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Smith, Albert V %A Kao, W H Linda %A Lohman, Kurt %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Brown, Edward M %A Siscovick, David S %A Harris, Tamara B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Coresh, Josef %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Liu, Yong Mei %A Kestenbaum, Bryan R %A Fox, Caroline S %A Köttgen, Anna %K Adult %K Calcium %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Receptors, Calcium-Sensing %X

Serum calcium levels are tightly regulated. We performed genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in population-based studies participating in the CHARGE Consortium to uncover common genetic variations associated with total serum calcium levels. GWAS of serum calcium concentrations was performed in 20 611 individuals of European ancestry for ∼2.5 million genotyped and imputed single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The SNP with the lowest P-value was rs17251221 (P = 2.4 * 10(-22), minor allele frequency 14%) in the calcium-sensing receptor gene (CASR). This lead SNP was associated with higher serum calcium levels [0.06 mg/dl (0.015 mmol/l) per copy of the minor G allele] and accounted for 0.54% of the variance in serum calcium concentrations. The identification of variation in CASR that influences serum calcium concentration confirms the results of earlier candidate gene studies. The G allele of rs17251221 was also associated with higher serum magnesium levels (P = 1.2 * 10(-3)), lower serum phosphate levels (P = 2.8 * 10(-7)) and lower bone mineral density at the lumbar spine (P = 0.038), but not the femoral neck. No additional genomic loci contained SNPs associated at genome-wide significance (P < 5 * 10(-8)). These associations resemble clinical characteristics of patients with familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia, an autosomal-dominant disease arising from rare inactivating mutations in the CASR gene. We conclude that common genetic variation in the CASR gene is associated with similar but milder features in the general population.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 19 %P 4296-303 %8 2010 Nov 01 %G eng %N 21 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20705733?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddq342 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2010 %T Four novel Loci (19q13, 6q24, 12q24, and 5q14) influence the microcirculation in vivo. %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Sim, Xueling %A Xueling, Sim %A Jensen, Richard A %A Cotch, Mary Frances %A Hewitt, Alex W %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Klein, Ronald %A Klein, Barbara E K %A Breteler, Monique M B %A Cheung, Ning %A Liew, Gerald %A Mitchell, Paul %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A de Jong, Paulus T V M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Kao, Linda %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Lumley, Thomas %A McKnight, Barbara %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Jonasson, Fridbert %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Aspelund, Thor %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Taylor, Kent D %A Li, Xiaohui %A Iyengar, Sudha K %A Xi, Quansheng %A Sivakumaran, Theru A %A Mackey, David A %A Macgregor, Stuart %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Young, Terri L %A Bis, Josh C %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hammond, Christopher J %A Andrew, Toby %A Fahy, Samantha %A Attia, John %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Scott, Rodney J %A Islam, F M Amirul %A Rotter, Jerome I %A McAuley, Annie K %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Tai, E Shyong %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Siscovick, David S %A Vingerling, Johannes R %A Wong, Tien Y %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Child %K Child, Preschool %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 12 %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 19 %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 6 %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Microcirculation %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Retinal Vessels %K Young Adult %X

There is increasing evidence that the microcirculation plays an important role in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases. Changes in retinal vascular caliber reflect early microvascular disease and predict incident cardiovascular events. We performed a genome-wide association study to identify genetic variants associated with retinal vascular caliber. We analyzed data from four population-based discovery cohorts with 15,358 unrelated Caucasian individuals, who are members of the Cohort for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium, and replicated findings in four independent Caucasian cohorts (n  =  6,652). All participants had retinal photography and retinal arteriolar and venular caliber measured from computer software. In the discovery cohorts, 179 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) spread across five loci were significantly associated (p<5.0×10(-8)) with retinal venular caliber, but none showed association with arteriolar caliber. Collectively, these five loci explain 1.0%-3.2% of the variation in retinal venular caliber. Four out of these five loci were confirmed in independent replication samples. In the combined analyses, the top SNPs at each locus were: rs2287921 (19q13; p  =  1.61×10(-25), within the RASIP1 locus), rs225717 (6q24; p = 1.25×10(-16), adjacent to the VTA1 and NMBR loci), rs10774625 (12q24; p  =  2.15×10(-13), in the region of ATXN2,SH2B3 and PTPN11 loci), and rs17421627 (5q14; p = 7.32×10(-16), adjacent to the MEF2C locus). In two independent samples, locus 12q24 was also associated with coronary heart disease and hypertension. Our population-based genome-wide association study demonstrates four novel loci associated with retinal venular caliber, an endophenotype of the microcirculation associated with clinical cardiovascular disease. These data provide further insights into the contribution and biological mechanisms of microcirculatory changes that underlie cardiovascular disease.

%B PLoS Genet %V 6 %P e1001184 %8 2010 Oct 28 %G eng %N 10 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21060863?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001184 %0 Journal Article %J JAMA %D 2010 %T Genome-wide analysis of genetic loci associated with Alzheimer disease. %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Ikram, M Arfan %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Boada, Merce %A Bis, Joshua C %A Smith, Albert V %A Carassquillo, Minerva M %A Lambert, Jean Charles %A Harold, Denise %A Schrijvers, Elisabeth M C %A Ramirez-Lorca, Reposo %A Debette, Stephanie %A Longstreth, W T %A Janssens, A Cecile J W %A Pankratz, V Shane %A Dartigues, Jean François %A Hollingworth, Paul %A Aspelund, Thor %A Hernandez, Isabel %A Beiser, Alexa %A Kuller, Lewis H %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Dickson, Dennis W %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Abraham, Richard %A Antunez, Carmen %A Du, Yangchun %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Harris, Tamara B %A Petersen, Ronald C %A Berr, Claudine %A Owen, Michael J %A Lopez-Arrieta, Jesus %A Varadarajan, Badri N %A Becker, James T %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Nalls, Michael A %A Graff-Radford, Neill R %A Campion, Dominique %A Auerbach, Sanford %A Rice, Kenneth %A Hofman, Albert %A Jonsson, Palmi V %A Schmidt, Helena %A Lathrop, Mark %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Au, Rhoda %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Farrer, Lindsay A %A Lumley, Thomas %A Ruiz, Agustin %A Williams, Julie %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Younkin, Steve G %A Wolf, Philip A %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lopez, Oscar L %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Breteler, Monique M B %K Age of Onset %K Aged %K Alzheimer Disease %K Case-Control Studies %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Odds Ratio %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

CONTEXT: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have recently identified CLU, PICALM, and CR1 as novel genes for late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD).

OBJECTIVES: To identify and strengthen additional loci associated with AD and confirm these in an independent sample and to examine the contribution of recently identified genes to AD risk prediction in a 3-stage analysis of new and previously published GWAS on more than 35,000 persons (8371 AD cases).

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In stage 1, we identified strong genetic associations (P < 10(-3)) in a sample of 3006 AD cases and 14,642 controls by combining new data from the population-based Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium (1367 AD cases [973 incident]) with previously reported results from the Translational Genomics Research Institute and the Mayo AD GWAS. We identified 2708 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with P < 10(-3). In stage 2, we pooled results for these SNPs with the European AD Initiative (2032 cases and 5328 controls) to identify 38 SNPs (10 loci) with P < 10(-5). In stage 3, we combined data for these 10 loci with data from the Genetic and Environmental Risk in AD consortium (3333 cases and 6995 controls) to identify 4 SNPs with P < 1.7x10(-8). These 4 SNPs were replicated in an independent Spanish sample (1140 AD cases and 1209 controls). Genome-wide association analyses were completed in 2007-2008 and the meta-analyses and replication in 2009.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Presence of Alzheimer disease.

RESULTS: Two loci were identified to have genome-wide significance for the first time: rs744373 near BIN1 (odds ratio [OR],1.13; 95% confidence interval [CI],1.06-1.21 per copy of the minor allele; P = 1.59x10(-11)) and rs597668 near EXOC3L2/BLOC1S3/MARK4 (OR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.07-1.29; P = 6.45x10(-9)). Associations of these 2 loci plus the previously identified loci CLU and PICALM with AD were confirmed in the Spanish sample (P < .05). However, although CLU and PICALM were confirmed to be associated with AD in this independent sample, they did not improve the ability of a model that included age, sex, and APOE to predict incident AD (improvement in area under the receiver operating characteristic curve from 0.847 to 0.849 in the Rotterdam Study and 0.702 to 0.705 in the Cardiovascular Health Study).

CONCLUSIONS: Two genetic loci for AD were found for the first time to reach genome-wide statistical significance. These findings were replicated in an independent population. Two recently reported associations were also confirmed. These loci did not improve AD risk prediction. While not clinically useful, they may implicate biological pathways useful for future research.

%B JAMA %V 303 %P 1832-40 %8 2010 May 12 %G eng %N 18 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20460622?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1001/jama.2010.574 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2010 %T Genome-wide association analysis identifies multiple loci related to resting heart rate. %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Müller, Martina %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Smith, Albert V %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Sanna, Serena %A Dörr, Marcus %A Navarro, Pau %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Nolte, Ilja M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Estrada, Karol %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rückert, Ina-Maria %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Launer, Lenore J %A Hottenga, Jouke Jan %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Noseworthy, Peter A %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Perz, Siegfried %A Arking, Dan E %A Spector, Tim D %A Kors, Jan A %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Homuth, Georg %A Wild, Sarah H %A Marroni, Fabio %A Gieger, Christian %A Licht, Carmilla M %A Prineas, Ronald J %A Hofman, Albert %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Ernst, Florian %A Najjar, Samer S %A Wright, Alan F %A Peters, Annette %A Fox, Ervin R %A Oostra, Ben A %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Couper, David %A Völzke, Henry %A Campbell, Harry %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Uda, Manuela %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Harris, Tamara B %A Kääb, Stefan %A Siscovick, David S %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Larson, Martin G %A Wilson, James F %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Snieder, Harold %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Felix, Stephan B %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K Adult %K Aged %K Base Pairing %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heart Rate %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Rest %X

Higher resting heart rate is associated with increased cardiovascular disease and mortality risk. Though heritable factors play a substantial role in population variation, little is known about specific genetic determinants. This knowledge can impact clinical care by identifying novel factors that influence pathologic heart rate states, modulate heart rate through cardiac structure and function or by improving our understanding of the physiology of heart rate regulation. To identify common genetic variants associated with heart rate, we performed a meta-analysis of 15 genome-wide association studies (GWAS), including 38,991 subjects of European ancestry, estimating the association between age-, sex- and body mass-adjusted RR interval (inverse heart rate) and approximately 2.5 million markers. Results with P < 5 × 10(-8) were considered genome-wide significant. We constructed regression models with multiple markers to assess whether results at less stringent thresholds were likely to be truly associated with RR interval. We identified six novel associations with resting heart rate at six loci: 6q22 near GJA1; 14q12 near MYH7; 12p12 near SOX5, c12orf67, BCAT1, LRMP and CASC1; 6q22 near SLC35F1, PLN and c6orf204; 7q22 near SLC12A9 and UfSp1; and 11q12 near FADS1. Associations at 6q22 400 kb away from GJA1, at 14q12 MYH6 and at 1q32 near CD34 identified in previously published GWAS were confirmed. In aggregate, these variants explain approximately 0.7% of RR interval variance. A multivariant regression model including 20 variants with P < 10(-5) increased the explained variance to 1.6%, suggesting that some loci falling short of genome-wide significance are likely truly associated. Future research is warranted to elucidate underlying mechanisms that may impact clinical care.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 19 %P 3885-94 %8 2010 Oct 01 %G eng %N 19 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20639392?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddq303 %0 Journal Article %J Stroke %D 2010 %T Genome-wide association studies of MRI-defined brain infarcts: meta-analysis from the CHARGE Consortium. %A Debette, Stephanie %A Bis, Joshua C %A Fornage, Myriam %A Schmidt, Helena %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Sigurdsson, Sigurdur %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Smith, Albert V %A van der Lugt, Aad %A DeCarli, Charles %A Lumley, Thomas %A Knopman, David S %A Enzinger, Christian %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Dufouil, Carole %A Catellier, Diane J %A Fazekas, Franz %A Aspelund, Thor %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Beiser, Alexa %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Shibata, Dean K %A Tscherner, Maria %A Harris, Tamara B %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Atwood, Larry D %A Rice, Kenneth %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A van Buchem, Mark A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kelly-Hayes, Margaret %A Cushman, Mary %A Zhu, Yicheng %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Romero, Jose R %A Lopez, Oscar %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Au, Rhoda %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Wolf, Philip A %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Breteler, Monique M B %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Launer, Lenore J %A Longstreth, W T %K African Americans %K Aged %K Brain %K Brain Infarction %K Cohort Studies %K DNA Mutational Analysis %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Markers %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genetic Testing %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Linkage Disequilibrium %K Magnetic Resonance Imaging %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prospective Studies %X

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Previous studies examining genetic associations with MRI-defined brain infarct have yielded inconsistent findings. We investigated genetic variation underlying covert MRI infarct in persons without histories of transient ischemic attack or stroke. We performed meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of white participants in 6 studies comprising the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium.

METHODS: Using 2.2 million genotyped and imputed single nucleotide polymorphisms, each study performed cross-sectional genome-wide association analysis of MRI infarct using age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression models. Study-specific findings were combined in an inverse-variance-weighted meta-analysis, including 9401 participants with mean age 69.7 (19.4% of whom had >or=1 MRI infarct).

RESULTS: The most significant association was found with rs2208454 (minor allele frequency, 20%), located in intron 3 of MACRO domain containing 2 gene and in the downstream region of fibronectin leucine-rich transmembrane protein 3 gene. Each copy of the minor allele was associated with lower risk of MRI infarcts (odds ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.68-0.84; P=4.64x10(-7)). Highly suggestive associations (P<1.0x10(-5)) were also found for 22 other single nucleotide polymorphisms in linkage disequilibrium (r(2)>0.64) with rs2208454. The association with rs2208454 did not replicate in independent samples of 1822 white and 644 black participants, although 4 single nucleotide polymorphisms within 200 kb from rs2208454 were associated with MRI infarcts in the black population sample.

CONCLUSIONS: This first community-based, genome-wide association study on covert MRI infarcts uncovered novel associations. Although replication of the association with top single nucleotide polymorphisms failed, possibly because of insufficient power, results in the black population sample are encouraging, and further efforts at replication are needed.

%B Stroke %V 41 %P 210-7 %8 2010 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20044523?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/STROKEAHA.109.569194 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2010 %T Genome-wide association studies of serum magnesium, potassium, and sodium concentrations identify six Loci influencing serum magnesium levels. %A Meyer, Tamra E %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Smith, Albert V %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Ehret, Georg B %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Felix, Janine F %A Leak, Tennille S %A Harris, Tamara B %A Yang, Qiong %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Aspelund, Thor %A Katz, Ronit %A Homuth, Georg %A Kocher, Thomas %A Rettig, Rainer %A Ried, Janina S %A Gieger, Christian %A Prucha, Hanna %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Coresh, Josef %A Hofman, Albert %A Sarnak, Mark J %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Kao, W H Linda %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Siscovick, David S %A Fox, Caroline S %A Köttgen, Anna %K Adult %K Aged %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Magnesium %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Potassium %K Sodium %X

Magnesium, potassium, and sodium, cations commonly measured in serum, are involved in many physiological processes including energy metabolism, nerve and muscle function, signal transduction, and fluid and blood pressure regulation. To evaluate the contribution of common genetic variation to normal physiologic variation in serum concentrations of these cations, we conducted genome-wide association studies of serum magnesium, potassium, and sodium concentrations using approximately 2.5 million genotyped and imputed common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 15,366 participants of European descent from the international CHARGE Consortium. Study-specific results were combined using fixed-effects inverse-variance weighted meta-analysis. SNPs demonstrating genome-wide significant (p<5 x 10(-8)) or suggestive associations (p<4 x 10(-7)) were evaluated for replication in an additional 8,463 subjects of European descent. The association of common variants at six genomic regions (in or near MUC1, ATP2B1, DCDC5, TRPM6, SHROOM3, and MDS1) with serum magnesium levels was genome-wide significant when meta-analyzed with the replication dataset. All initially significant SNPs from the CHARGE Consortium showed nominal association with clinically defined hypomagnesemia, two showed association with kidney function, two with bone mineral density, and one of these also associated with fasting glucose levels. Common variants in CNNM2, a magnesium transporter studied only in model systems to date, as well as in CNNM3 and CNNM4, were also associated with magnesium concentrations in this study. We observed no associations with serum sodium or potassium levels exceeding p<4 x 10(-7). Follow-up studies of newly implicated genomic loci may provide additional insights into the regulation and homeostasis of human serum magnesium levels.

%B PLoS Genet %V 6 %8 2010 Aug 05 %G eng %N 8 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20700443?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001045 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T Genome-wide association study of PR interval. %A Pfeufer, Arne %A van Noord, Charlotte %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Arking, Dan E %A Larson, Martin G %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Müller, Martina %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Li, Man %A Kao, W H Linda %A Köttgen, Anna %A Coresh, Josef %A Bis, Joshua C %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A Kors, Jan A %A Stricker, Bruno H C %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Beckmann, Britt M %A Sauter, Wiebke %A Gieger, Christian %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Wang, Thomas J %A Magnani, Jared W %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Chung, Mina K %A Barnard, John %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Najjar, Samer S %A Lakatta, Edward %A Schlessinger, David %A Uda, Manuela %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Müller-Myhsok, Bertram %A Ehret, Georg B %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Perz, Siegfried %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Levy, Daniel %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Sanna, Serena %A Kääb, Stefan %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Heckbert, Susan R %K Aged %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Cohort Studies %K Electrocardiography %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heart Conduction System %K Humans %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %X

The electrocardiographic PR interval (or PQ interval) reflects atrial and atrioventricular nodal conduction, disturbances of which increase risk of atrial fibrillation. We report a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for PR interval from seven population-based European studies in the CHARGE Consortium: AGES, ARIC, CHS, FHS, KORA, Rotterdam Study, and SardiNIA (N = 28,517). We identified nine loci associated with PR interval at P < 5 x 10(-8). At the 3p22.2 locus, we observed two independent associations in voltage-gated sodium channel genes, SCN10A and SCN5A. Six of the loci were near cardiac developmental genes, including CAV1-CAV2, NKX2-5 (CSX1), SOX5, WNT11, MEIS1, and TBX5-TBX3, providing pathophysiologically interesting candidate genes. Five of the loci, SCN5A, SCN10A, NKX2-5, CAV1-CAV2, and SOX5, were also associated with atrial fibrillation (N = 5,741 cases, P < 0.0056). This suggests a role for common variation in ion channel and developmental genes in atrial and atrioventricular conduction as well as in susceptibility to atrial fibrillation.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 153-9 %8 2010 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20062060?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.517 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2010 %T Genomic variation associated with mortality among adults of European and African ancestry with heart failure: the cohorts for heart and aging research in genomic epidemiology consortium. %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Felix, Janine F %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Loehr, Laura R %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rosamond, Wayne D %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Wang, Ying A %A Haritunians, Talin %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Lumley, Thomas %A Couper, David %A Stricker, Bruno H %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Chang, Patricia P %A Hofman, Albert %A Levy, Daniel %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Fox, Ervin R %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wang, Thomas J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Willerson, James T %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Smith, Nicholas L %K African Americans %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Chemokines %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Heart Failure %K Humans %K Introns %K Male %K MARVEL Domain-Containing Proteins %K Membrane Proteins %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %X

BACKGROUND: Prognosis and survival are significant concerns for individuals with heart failure (HF). To better understand the pathophysiology of HF prognosis, the association between 2,366,858 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and all-cause mortality was evaluated among individuals with incident HF from 4 community-based prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Participants were 2526 individuals of European ancestry and 466 individuals of African ancestry who experienced an incident HF event during follow-up in the respective cohorts. Within each study, the association between genetic variants and time to mortality among individuals with HF was assessed by Cox proportional hazards models that included adjustment for sex and age at the time of the HF event. Prospective fixed-effect meta-analyses were conducted for the 4 study populations of European ancestry (N=1645 deaths) and for the 2 populations of African ancestry (N=281 deaths). Genome-wide significance was set at P=5.0x10(-7). Meta-analytic findings among individuals of European ancestry revealed 1 genome-wide significant locus on chromosome 3p22 in an intron of CKLF-like MARVEL transmembrane domain containing 7 (CMTM7, P=3.2x10(-7)). Eight additional loci in individuals of European ancestry and 4 loci in individuals of African ancestry were identified by high-signal SNPs (P<1.0x10(-5)) but did not meet genome-wide significance.

CONCLUSIONS: This study identified a novel locus associated with all-cause mortality among individuals of European ancestry with HF. This finding warrants additional investigation, including replication, in other studies of HF.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 3 %P 248-55 %8 2010 Jun %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20400778?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.109.895995 %0 Journal Article %J Nature %D 2010 %T Hundreds of variants clustered in genomic loci and biological pathways affect human height. %A Lango Allen, Hana %A Estrada, Karol %A Lettre, Guillaume %A Berndt, Sonja I %A Weedon, Michael N %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Willer, Cristen J %A Jackson, Anne U %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Wood, Andrew R %A Weyant, Robert J %A Segrè, Ayellet V %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A Wheeler, Eleanor %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Park, Ju-Hyun %A Yang, Jian %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A Randall, Joshua C %A Qi, Lu %A Vernon Smith, Albert %A Mägi, Reedik %A Pastinen, Tomi %A Liang, Liming %A Heid, Iris M %A Luan, Jian'an %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Goddard, Michael E %A Sin Lo, Ken %A Palmer, Cameron %A Workalemahu, Tsegaselassie %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Johansson, Asa %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Esko, Tõnu %A Johnson, Toby %A Ketkar, Shamika %A Kraft, Peter %A Mangino, Massimo %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Absher, Devin %A Albrecht, Eva %A Ernst, Florian %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Jacobs, Kevin B %A Knowles, Joshua W %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Monda, Keri L %A Polasek, Ozren %A Preuss, Michael %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Robertson, Neil R %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Tyrer, Jonathan P %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Wiklund, Fredrik %A Xu, Jianfeng %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Nyholt, Dale R %A Pellikka, Niina %A Perola, Markus %A Perry, John R B %A Surakka, Ida %A Tammesoo, Mari-Liis %A Altmaier, Elizabeth L %A Amin, Najaf %A Aspelund, Thor %A Bhangale, Tushar %A Boucher, Gabrielle %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chen, Constance %A Coin, Lachlan %A Cooper, Matthew N %A Dixon, Anna L %A Gibson, Quince %A Grundberg, Elin %A Hao, Ke %A Juhani Junttila, M %A Kaplan, Lee M %A Kettunen, Johannes %A König, Inke R %A Kwan, Tony %A Lawrence, Robert W %A Levinson, Douglas F %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A McKnight, Barbara %A Morris, Andrew P %A Müller, Martina %A Suh Ngwa, Julius %A Purcell, Shaun %A Rafelt, Suzanne %A Salem, Rany M %A Salvi, Erika %A Sanna, Serena %A Shi, Jianxin %A Sovio, Ulla %A Thompson, John R %A Turchin, Michael C %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Verlaan, Dominique J %A Vitart, Veronique %A White, Charles C %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Almgren, Peter %A Balmforth, Anthony J %A Campbell, Harry %A Citterio, Lorena %A De Grandi, Alessandro %A Dominiczak, Anna %A Duan, Jubao %A Elliott, Paul %A Elosua, Roberto %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Geus, Eco J C %A Glorioso, Nicola %A Haiqing, Shen %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hui, Jennie %A Igl, Wilmar %A Illig, Thomas %A Jula, Antti %A Kajantie, Eero %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koiranen, Markku %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Kovacs, Peter %A Laitinen, Jaana %A Liu, Jianjun %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Marusic, Ana %A Maschio, Andrea %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Mulas, Antonella %A Paré, Guillaume %A Parker, Alex N %A Peden, John F %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Pichler, Irene %A Pietiläinen, Kirsi H %A Pouta, Anneli %A Ridderstråle, Martin %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sambrook, Jennifer G %A Sanders, Alan R %A Schmidt, Carsten Oliver %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Smit, Jan H %A Stringham, Heather M %A Bragi Walters, G %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Zagato, Laura %A Zgaga, Lina %A Zitting, Paavo %A Alavere, Helene %A Farrall, Martin %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Nelis, Mari %A Peters, Marjolein J %A Ripatti, Samuli %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Aben, Katja K %A Ardlie, Kristin G %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Beilby, John P %A Bergman, Richard N %A Bergmann, Sven %A Collins, Francis S %A Cusi, Daniele %A den Heijer, Martin %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Gejman, Pablo V %A Hall, Alistair S %A Hamsten, Anders %A Huikuri, Heikki V %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Kiemeney, Lambertus %A Kocher, Thomas %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Melander, Olle %A Mosley, Tom H %A Musk, Arthur W %A Nieminen, Markku S %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Oostra, Ben %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Raitakari, Olli %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rioux, John D %A Rissanen, Aila %A Rivolta, Carlo %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Siscovick, David S %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A van Ommen, Gert-Jan %A Viikari, Jorma %A Heath, Andrew C %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Province, Michael A %A Kayser, Manfred %A Arnold, Alice M %A Atwood, Larry D %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Deloukas, Panos %A Gieger, Christian %A Grönberg, Henrik %A Hall, Per %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Hoffman, Wolfgang %A Lathrop, G Mark %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Schreiber, Stefan %A Uda, Manuela %A Waterworth, Dawn %A Wright, Alan F %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Barroso, Inês %A Hofman, Albert %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Fox, Caroline S %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hayes, Richard B %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Mooser, Vincent %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Ouwehand, Willem H %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Rudan, Igor %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Spector, Timothy D %A Völzke, Henry %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wilson, James F %A Groop, Leif C %A Haritunians, Talin %A Hu, Frank B %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Metspalu, Andres %A North, Kari E %A Schlessinger, David %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Hunter, David J %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Strachan, David P %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Schadt, Eric E %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Peltonen, Leena %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Visscher, Peter M %A Chatterjee, Nilanjan %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Boehnke, Michael %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Stefansson, Kari %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %K Body Height %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3 %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Metabolic Networks and Pathways %K Multifactorial Inheritance %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Most common human traits and diseases have a polygenic pattern of inheritance: DNA sequence variants at many genetic loci influence the phenotype. Genome-wide association (GWA) studies have identified more than 600 variants associated with human traits, but these typically explain small fractions of phenotypic variation, raising questions about the use of further studies. Here, using 183,727 individuals, we show that hundreds of genetic variants, in at least 180 loci, influence adult height, a highly heritable and classic polygenic trait. The large number of loci reveals patterns with important implications for genetic studies of common human diseases and traits. First, the 180 loci are not random, but instead are enriched for genes that are connected in biological pathways (P = 0.016) and that underlie skeletal growth defects (P < 0.001). Second, the likely causal gene is often located near the most strongly associated variant: in 13 of 21 loci containing a known skeletal growth gene, that gene was closest to the associated variant. Third, at least 19 loci have multiple independently associated variants, suggesting that allelic heterogeneity is a frequent feature of polygenic traits, that comprehensive explorations of already-discovered loci should discover additional variants and that an appreciable fraction of associated loci may have been identified. Fourth, associated variants are enriched for likely functional effects on genes, being over-represented among variants that alter amino-acid structure of proteins and expression levels of nearby genes. Our data explain approximately 10% of the phenotypic variation in height, and we estimate that unidentified common variants of similar effect sizes would increase this figure to approximately 16% of phenotypic variation (approximately 20% of heritable variation). Although additional approaches are needed to dissect the genetic architecture of polygenic human traits fully, our findings indicate that GWA studies can identify large numbers of loci that implicate biologically relevant genes and pathways.

%B Nature %V 467 %P 832-8 %8 2010 Oct 14 %G eng %N 7317 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20881960?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/nature09410 %0 Journal Article %J Diabetes Care %D 2010 %T Interactions of dietary whole-grain intake with fasting glucose- and insulin-related genetic loci in individuals of European descent: a meta-analysis of 14 cohort studies. %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Hivert, Marie-France %A Ngwa, Julius %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Ye, Zheng %A Tanaka, Tosh %A Garcia, Melissa %A Anderson, Jennifer S %A Follis, Jack L %A Djoussé, Luc %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Papoutsakis, Constantina %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bennett, Amanda J %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Groves, Christopher J %A Hallmans, Göran %A Harris, Tamara %A Hofman, Albert %A Houston, Denise K %A Hu, Frank B %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore %A Liu, Yongmei %A Loos, Ruth J %A Nalls, Michael %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Renstrom, Frida %A Rice, Kenneth %A Riserus, Ulf %A Rolandsson, Olov %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Saylor, Georgia %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Sjogren, Per %A Smith, Albert %A Steingrímsdóttir, Laufey %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Pankow, James S %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Florez, Jose C %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Dupuis, Josée %A Dedoussis, George V %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Siscovick, David S %A Franks, Paul W %A Meigs, James B %K Adult %K Aged %K Blood Glucose %K Edible Grain %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Fasting %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Insulin %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

OBJECTIVE: Whole-grain foods are touted for multiple health benefits, including enhancing insulin sensitivity and reducing type 2 diabetes risk. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with fasting glucose and insulin concentrations in individuals free of diabetes. We tested the hypothesis that whole-grain food intake and genetic variation interact to influence concentrations of fasting glucose and insulin.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Via meta-analysis of data from 14 cohorts comprising ∼ 48,000 participants of European descent, we studied interactions of whole-grain intake with loci previously associated in GWAS with fasting glucose (16 loci) and/or insulin (2 loci) concentrations. For tests of interaction, we considered a P value <0.0028 (0.05 of 18 tests) as statistically significant.

RESULTS: Greater whole-grain food intake was associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin concentrations independent of demographics, other dietary and lifestyle factors, and BMI (β [95% CI] per 1-serving-greater whole-grain intake: -0.009 mmol/l glucose [-0.013 to -0.005], P < 0.0001 and -0.011 pmol/l [ln] insulin [-0.015 to -0.007], P = 0.0003). No interactions met our multiple testing-adjusted statistical significance threshold. The strongest SNP interaction with whole-grain intake was rs780094 (GCKR) for fasting insulin (P = 0.006), where greater whole-grain intake was associated with a smaller reduction in fasting insulin concentrations in those with the insulin-raising allele.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results support the favorable association of whole-grain intake with fasting glucose and insulin and suggest a potential interaction between variation in GCKR and whole-grain intake in influencing fasting insulin concentrations.

%B Diabetes Care %V 33 %P 2684-91 %8 2010 Dec %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20693352?dopt=Abstract %R 10.2337/dc10-1150 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2010 %T Large-scale genomic studies reveal central role of ABO in sP-selectin and sICAM-1 levels. %A Barbalic, Maja %A Dupuis, Josée %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Bis, Joshua C %A Hoogeveen, Ron C %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Nambi, Vijay %A Bretler, Monique %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Peters, Annette %A Lu, Chen %A Tracy, Russell P %A Aleksic, Nena %A Heeriga, Jan %A Keaney, John F %A Rice, Kenneth %A Lip, Gregory Y H %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Larson, Martin G %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Yamamoto, Jennifer %A Durda, Peter %A Haritunians, Talin %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Hofman, Albert %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Jenny, Nancy S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Ballantyne, Christie %A Benjamin, Emelia J %K ABO Blood-Group System %K Blood Platelets %K Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Fluorescence %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 %K P-Selectin %X

P-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) participate in inflammatory processes by promoting adhesion of leukocytes to vascular wall endothelium. Their soluble levels have been associated with adverse cardiovascular events. To identify loci affecting soluble levels of P-selectin (sP-selectin) and ICAM-1 (sICAM-1), we performed a genome-wide association study in a sample of 4115 (sP-selectin) and 9813 (sICAM-1) individuals of European ancestry as a part of The Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genome Epidemiology consortium. The most significant SNP association for sP-selectin was within the SELP gene (rs6136, P = 4.05 x 10(-61)) and for sICAM-1 levels within the ICAM-1 gene (rs3093030, P = 3.53 x 10(-23)). Both sP-selectin and sICAM-1 were associated with ABO gene variants (rs579459, P = 1.86 x 10(-41) and rs649129, P = 1.22 x 10(-15), respectively) and in both cases the observed associations could be accounted for by the A1 allele of the ABO blood group. The absence of an association between ABO blood group and platelet-bound P-selectin levels in an independent subsample (N = 1088) from the ARIC study, suggests that the ABO blood group may influence cleavage of the P-selectin protein from the cell surface or clearance from the circulation, rather than its production and cellular presentation. These results provide new insights into adhesion molecule biology.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 19 %P 1863-72 %8 2010 May 01 %G eng %N 9 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20167578?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddq061 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T Meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies identify multiple loci associated with pulmonary function. %A Hancock, Dana B %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Gharib, Sina A %A Loehr, Laura R %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Franceschini, Nora %A van Durme, Yannick M T A %A Chen, Ting-Hsu %A Barr, R Graham %A Schabath, Matthew B %A Couper, David J %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Punjabi, Naresh M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Enright, Paul L %A North, Kari E %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Lumley, Thomas %A Stricker, Bruno H C %A O'Connor, George T %A London, Stephanie J %K Databases, Genetic %K Female %K Forced Expiratory Volume %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Lung %K Lung Diseases %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Spirometry %K Vital Capacity %X

Spirometric measures of lung function are heritable traits that reflect respiratory health and predict morbidity and mortality. We meta-analyzed genome-wide association studies for two clinically important lung-function measures: forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV(1)) and its ratio to forced vital capacity (FEV(1)/FVC), an indicator of airflow obstruction. This meta-analysis included 20,890 participants of European ancestry from four CHARGE Consortium studies: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities, Cardiovascular Health Study, Framingham Heart Study and Rotterdam Study. We identified eight loci associated with FEV(1)/FVC (HHIP, GPR126, ADAM19, AGER-PPT2, FAM13A, PTCH1, PID1 and HTR4) and one locus associated with FEV(1) (INTS12-GSTCD-NPNT) at or near genome-wide significance (P < 5 x 10(-8)) in the CHARGE Consortium dataset. Our findings may offer insights into pulmonary function and pathogenesis of chronic lung disease.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 45-52 %8 2010 Jan %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20010835?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.500 %0 Journal Article %J J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci %D 2010 %T A meta-analysis of four genome-wide association studies of survival to age 90 years or older: the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium. %A Newman, Anne B %A Walter, Stefan %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Christensen, Kaare %A Arnold, Alice M %A Aspelund, Thor %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Christiansen, Lene %A D'Agostino, Ralph B %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Franceschini, Nora %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Kaplan, Robert %A Karasik, David %A Kelly-Hayes, Margaret %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Launer, Lenore J %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Massaro, Joseph M %A Miljkovic, Iva %A Nalls, Michael A %A Hernandez, Dena %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Smith, Albert V %A Taylor, Kent D %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Uh, Hae-Won %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaupel, James W %A Walston, Jeremy %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Lumley, Thomas %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Murabito, Joanne M %K Adult %K Age Factors %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Alleles %K Cohort Studies %K Confidence Intervals %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Longevity %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Odds Ratio %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

BACKGROUND: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) may yield insights into longevity.

METHODS: We performed a meta-analysis of GWAS in Caucasians from four prospective cohort studies: the Age, Gene/Environment Susceptibility-Reykjavik Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study participating in the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium. Longevity was defined as survival to age 90 years or older (n = 1,836); the comparison group comprised cohort members who died between the ages of 55 and 80 years (n = 1,955). In a second discovery stage, additional genotyping was conducted in the Leiden Longevity Study cohort and the Danish 1905 cohort.

RESULTS: There were 273 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations with p < .0001, but none reached the prespecified significance level of 5 x 10(-8). Of the most significant SNPs, 24 were independent signals, and 16 of these SNPs were successfully genotyped in the second discovery stage, with one association for rs9664222, reaching 6.77 x 10(-7) for the combined meta-analysis of CHARGE and the stage 2 cohorts. The SNP lies in a region near MINPP1 (chromosome 10), a well-conserved gene involved in regulation of cellular proliferation. The minor allele was associated with lower odds of survival past age 90 (odds ratio = 0.82). Associations of interest in a homologue of the longevity assurance gene (LASS3) and PAPPA2 were not strengthened in the second stage.

CONCLUSION: Survival studies of larger size or more extreme or specific phenotypes may support or refine these initial findings.

%B J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci %V 65 %P 478-87 %8 2010 May %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20304771?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/gerona/glq028 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2010 %T Multiple genetic loci influence serum urate levels and their relationship with gout and cardiovascular disease risk factors. %A Yang, Qiong %A Köttgen, Anna %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Smith, Albert V %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore %A Nalls, Michael %A Hernandez, Dena %A Arking, Dan E %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Grove, Megan L %A Li, Man %A Linda Kao, W H %A Chonchol, Michel %A Haritunians, Talin %A Li, Guo %A Lumley, Thomas %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Shlipak, Michael %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Larson, Martin G %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Upadhyay, Ashish %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Stricker, Bruno %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Paré, Guillaume %A Parker, Alex N %A Ridker, Paul M %A Siscovick, David S %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Fox, Caroline S %A Coresh, Josef %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Coronary Disease %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Gout %K Humans %K Male %K Risk Factors %K Uric Acid %X

BACKGROUND: Elevated serum urate levels can lead to gout and are associated with cardiovascular risk factors. We performed a genome-wide association study to search for genetic susceptibility loci for serum urate and gout and investigated the causal nature of the associations of serum urate with gout and selected cardiovascular risk factors and coronary heart disease (CHD).

METHODS AND RESULTS: Meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) were performed in 5 population-based cohorts of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genome Epidemiology consortium for serum urate and gout in 28 283 white participants. The effect of the most significant single-nucleotide polymorphism at all genome-wide significant loci on serum urate was added to create a genetic urate score. Findings were replicated in the Women's Genome Health Study (n=22 054). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms at 8 genetic loci achieved genome-wide significance with serum urate levels (P=4×10(-8) to 2×10(-242) in SLC22A11, GCKR, R3HDM2-INHBC region, RREB1, PDZK1, SLC2A9, ABCG2, and SLC17A1). Only 2 loci (SLC2A9, ABCG2) showed genome-wide significant association with gout. The genetic urate score was strongly associated with serum urate and gout (odds ratio, 12.4 per 100 μmol/L; P=3×10(-39)) but not with blood pressure, glucose, estimated glomerular filtration rate, chronic kidney disease, or CHD. The lack of association between the genetic score and the latter phenotypes also was observed in the Women's Genome Health Study.

CONCLUSIONS: The genetic urate score analysis suggested a causal relationship between serum urate and gout but did not provide evidence for one between serum urate and cardiovascular risk factors and CHD.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 3 %P 523-30 %8 2010 Dec %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20884846?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.109.934455 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T New genetic loci implicated in fasting glucose homeostasis and their impact on type 2 diabetes risk. %A Dupuis, Josée %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Saxena, Richa %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Jackson, Anne U %A Wheeler, Eleanor %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Bouatia-Naji, Nabila %A Gloyn, Anna L %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Mägi, Reedik %A Morris, Andrew P %A Randall, Joshua %A Johnson, Toby %A Elliott, Paul %A Rybin, Denis %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Henneman, Peter %A Grallert, Harald %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Hottenga, Jouke Jan %A Franklin, Christopher S %A Navarro, Pau %A Song, Kijoung %A Goel, Anuj %A Perry, John R B %A Egan, Josephine M %A Lajunen, Taina %A Grarup, Niels %A Sparsø, Thomas %A Doney, Alex %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Stringham, Heather M %A Li, Man %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Shrader, Peter %A Cavalcanti-Proença, Christine %A Kumari, Meena %A Qi, Lu %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Gieger, Christian %A Zabena, Carina %A Rocheleau, Ghislain %A Ingelsson, Erik %A An, Ping %A O'Connell, Jeffrey %A Luan, Jian'an %A Elliott, Amanda %A McCarroll, Steven A %A Payne, Felicity %A Roccasecca, Rosa Maria %A Pattou, François %A Sethupathy, Praveen %A Ardlie, Kristin %A Ariyurek, Yavuz %A Balkau, Beverley %A Barter, Philip %A Beilby, John P %A Ben-Shlomo, Yoav %A Benediktsson, Rafn %A Bennett, Amanda J %A Bergmann, Sven %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bonnefond, Amélie %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Borch-Johnsen, Knut %A Böttcher, Yvonne %A Brunner, Eric %A Bumpstead, Suzannah J %A Charpentier, Guillaume %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Chines, Peter %A Clarke, Robert %A Coin, Lachlan J M %A Cooper, Matthew N %A Cornelis, Marilyn %A Crawford, Gabe %A Crisponi, Laura %A Day, Ian N M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Delplanque, Jerome %A Dina, Christian %A Erdos, Michael R %A Fedson, Annette C %A Fischer-Rosinsky, Antje %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Fox, Caroline S %A Frants, Rune %A Franzosi, Maria Grazia %A Galan, Pilar %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Graessler, Jürgen %A Groves, Christopher J %A Grundy, Scott %A Gwilliam, Rhian %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hadjadj, Samy %A Hallmans, Göran %A Hammond, Naomi %A Han, Xijing %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hassanali, Neelam %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heath, Simon C %A Hercberg, Serge %A Herder, Christian %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hillman, David R %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Hofman, Albert %A Hui, Jennie %A Hung, Joe %A Isomaa, Bo %A Johnson, Paul R V %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Jula, Antti %A Kaakinen, Marika %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kesaniemi, Y Antero %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Knight, Beatrice %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Kovacs, Peter %A Kyvik, Kirsten Ohm %A Lathrop, G Mark %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Le Bacquer, Olivier %A Lecoeur, Cécile %A Li, Yun %A Lyssenko, Valeriya %A Mahley, Robert %A Mangino, Massimo %A Manning, Alisa K %A Martínez-Larrad, María Teresa %A McAteer, Jarred B %A McCulloch, Laura J %A McPherson, Ruth %A Meisinger, Christa %A Melzer, David %A Meyre, David %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Morken, Mario A %A Mukherjee, Sutapa %A Naitza, Silvia %A Narisu, Narisu %A Neville, Matthew J %A Oostra, Ben A %A Orrù, Marco %A Pakyz, Ruth %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Paolisso, Giuseppe %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Pearson, Daniel %A Peden, John F %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Perola, Markus %A Pfeiffer, Andreas F H %A Pichler, Irene %A Polasek, Ozren %A Posthuma, Danielle %A Potter, Simon C %A Pouta, Anneli %A Province, Michael A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rathmann, Wolfgang %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Rice, Kenneth %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Roden, Michael %A Rolandsson, Olov %A Sandbaek, Annelli %A Sandhu, Manjinder %A Sanna, Serena %A Sayer, Avan Aihie %A Scheet, Paul %A Scott, Laura J %A Seedorf, Udo %A Sharp, Stephen J %A Shields, Beverley %A Sigurethsson, Gunnar %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Silveira, Angela %A Simpson, Laila %A Singleton, Andrew %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Sovio, Ulla %A Swift, Amy %A Syddall, Holly %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Thorand, Barbara %A Tichet, Jean %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tuomi, Tiinamaija %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Dijk, Ko Willems %A van Hoek, Mandy %A Varma, Dhiraj %A Visvikis-Siest, Sophie %A Vitart, Veronique %A Vogelzangs, Nicole %A Waeber, Gérard %A Wagner, Peter J %A Walley, Andrew %A Walters, G Bragi %A Ward, Kim L %A Watkins, Hugh %A Weedon, Michael N %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Witteman, Jaqueline C M %A Yarnell, John W G %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Zelenika, Diana %A Zethelius, Björn %A Zhai, Guangju %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Meneton, Pierre %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Nathan, David M %A Williams, Gordon H %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Silander, Kaisa %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Smith, George Davey %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Schwarz, Peter %A Spranger, Joachim %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Dedoussis, George V %A Serrano-Ríos, Manuel %A Morris, Andrew D %A Lind, Lars %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Hu, Frank B %A Franks, Paul W %A Ebrahim, Shah %A Marmot, Michael %A Kao, W H Linda %A Pankow, James S %A Sampson, Michael J %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Hansen, Torben %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Pramstaller, Peter Paul %A Wichmann, H Erich %A Illig, Thomas %A Rudan, Igor %A Wright, Alan F %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Campbell, Harry %A Wilson, James F %A Bergman, Richard N %A Buchanan, Thomas A %A Collins, Francis S %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Valle, Timo T %A Altshuler, David %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Siscovick, David S %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Deloukas, Panos %A Spector, Timothy D %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Kong, Augustine %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Stefansson, Kari %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Cao, Antonio %A Scuteri, Angelo %A Schlessinger, David %A Uda, Manuela %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Peltonen, Leena %A Mooser, Vincent %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Sladek, Robert %A Froguel, Philippe %A Watanabe, Richard M %A Meigs, James B %A Groop, Leif %A Boehnke, Michael %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Florez, Jose C %A Barroso, Inês %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Alleles %K Blood Glucose %K Child %K Databases, Genetic %K Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 %K DNA Copy Number Variations %K Fasting %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Homeostasis %K Humans %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Quantitative Trait, Heritable %K Reproducibility of Results %X

Levels of circulating glucose are tightly regulated. To identify new loci influencing glycemic traits, we performed meta-analyses of 21 genome-wide association studies informative for fasting glucose, fasting insulin and indices of beta-cell function (HOMA-B) and insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) in up to 46,186 nondiabetic participants. Follow-up of 25 loci in up to 76,558 additional subjects identified 16 loci associated with fasting glucose and HOMA-B and two loci associated with fasting insulin and HOMA-IR. These include nine loci newly associated with fasting glucose (in or near ADCY5, MADD, ADRA2A, CRY2, FADS1, GLIS3, SLC2A2, PROX1 and C2CD4B) and one influencing fasting insulin and HOMA-IR (near IGF1). We also demonstrated association of ADCY5, PROX1, GCK, GCKR and DGKB-TMEM195 with type 2 diabetes. Within these loci, likely biological candidate genes influence signal transduction, cell proliferation, development, glucose-sensing and circadian regulation. Our results demonstrate that genetic studies of glycemic traits can identify type 2 diabetes risk loci, as well as loci containing gene variants that are associated with a modest elevation in glucose levels but are not associated with overt diabetes.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 105-16 %8 2010 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20081858?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.520 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2010 %T New loci associated with kidney function and chronic kidney disease. %A Köttgen, Anna %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Böger, Carsten A %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Olden, Matthias %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Parsa, Afshin %A Gao, Xiaoyi %A Yang, Qiong %A Smith, Albert V %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Li, Man %A Schmidt, Helena %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Ketkar, Shamika %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Teumer, Alexander %A Paré, Guillaume %A Atkinson, Elizabeth J %A Zeller, Tanja %A Lohman, Kurt %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Tönjes, Anke %A Hayward, Caroline %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Launer, Lenore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Rampersaud, Evadnie %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Arking, Dan E %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Cavalieri, Margherita %A Singleton, Andrew %A Giallauria, Francesco %A Metter, Jeffrey %A de Boer, Ian H %A Haritunians, Talin %A Lumley, Thomas %A Siscovick, David %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Oostra, Ben A %A Feitosa, Mary %A Province, Michael %A de Andrade, Mariza %A Turner, Stephen T %A Schillert, Arne %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Wild, Philipp S %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Wilde, Sandra %A Munzel, Thomas F %A Leak, Tennille S %A Illig, Thomas %A Klopp, Norman %A Meisinger, Christa %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Zgaga, Lina %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Minelli, Cosetta %A Hu, Frank B %A Johansson, Asa %A Igl, Wilmar %A Zaboli, Ghazal %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wright, Alan F %A Campbell, Harry %A Ellinghaus, David %A Schreiber, Stefan %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Felix, Janine F %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Imboden, Medea %A Nitsch, Dorothea %A Brandstätter, Anita %A Kollerits, Barbara %A Kedenko, Lyudmyla %A Mägi, Reedik %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Kovacs, Peter %A Boban, Mladen %A Campbell, Susan %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Völzke, Henry %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Nauck, Matthias %A Völker, Uwe %A Polasek, Ozren %A Vitart, Veronique %A Badola, Sunita %A Parker, Alexander N %A Ridker, Paul M %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Blankenberg, Stefan %A Liu, Yongmei %A Curhan, Gary C %A Franke, Andre %A Rochat, Thierry %A Paulweber, Bernhard %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Wang, Wei %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Coresh, Josef %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Shlipak, Michael G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Rudan, Igor %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Wilson, James F %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Rettig, Rainer %A Hastie, Nick %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Kao, W H %A Heid, Iris M %A Fox, Caroline S %K Cohort Studies %K Creatinine %K Cystatin C %K Diet %K Europe %K Genetic Markers %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glomerular Filtration Rate %K Humans %K Kidney %K Kidney Failure, Chronic %K Models, Genetic %K Risk Factors %X

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a significant public health problem, and recent genetic studies have identified common CKD susceptibility variants. The CKDGen consortium performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association data in 67,093 individuals of European ancestry from 20 predominantly population-based studies in order to identify new susceptibility loci for reduced renal function as estimated by serum creatinine (eGFRcrea), serum cystatin c (eGFRcys) and CKD (eGFRcrea < 60 ml/min/1.73 m(2); n = 5,807 individuals with CKD (cases)). Follow-up of the 23 new genome-wide-significant loci (P < 5 x 10(-8)) in 22,982 replication samples identified 13 new loci affecting renal function and CKD (in or near LASS2, GCKR, ALMS1, TFDP2, DAB2, SLC34A1, VEGFA, PRKAG2, PIP5K1B, ATXN2, DACH1, UBE2Q2 and SLC7A9) and 7 loci suspected to affect creatinine production and secretion (CPS1, SLC22A2, TMEM60, WDR37, SLC6A13, WDR72 and BCAS3). These results further our understanding of the biologic mechanisms of kidney function by identifying loci that potentially influence nephrogenesis, podocyte function, angiogenesis, solute transport and metabolic functions of the kidney.

%B Nat Genet %V 42 %P 376-84 %8 2010 May %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20383146?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.568 %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2010 %T Novel associations of multiple genetic loci with plasma levels of factor VII, factor VIII, and von Willebrand factor: The CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genome Epidemiology) Consortium. %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Strachan, David P %A Basu, Saonli %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Hayward, Caroline %A Rudan, Igor %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Bis, Joshua C %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Rumley, Ann %A Kong, Xiaoxiao %A Yang, Qiong %A Williams, Frances M K %A Vitart, Veronique %A Campbell, Harry %A Mälarstig, Anders %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Pankow, James S %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Silveira, Angela %A McKnight, Barbara %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Aleksic, Nena %A Meigs, James B %A Peters, Annette %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Cushman, Mary %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Bovill, Edwin G %A Hofman, Albert %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Peden, John F %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Leebeek, Frank %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Larson, Martin G %A Spector, Timothy D %A Wright, Alan F %A Wilson, James F %A Hamsten, Anders %A Lumley, Thomas %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Tang, Weihong %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K Adult %K Factor VII %K Factor VIII %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Hemostasis %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Thrombosis %K von Willebrand Factor %X

BACKGROUND: Plasma levels of coagulation factors VII (FVII), VIII (FVIII), and von Willebrand factor (vWF) influence risk of hemorrhage and thrombosis. We conducted genome-wide association studies to identify new loci associated with plasma levels.

METHODS AND RESULTS: The setting of the study included 5 community-based studies for discovery comprising 23 608 European-ancestry participants: Atherosclerosis Risk In Communities Study, Cardiovascular Health Study, British 1958 Birth Cohort, Framingham Heart Study, and Rotterdam Study. All subjects had genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) scans and at least 1 phenotype measured: FVII activity/antigen, FVIII activity, and vWF antigen. Each study used its genotype data to impute to HapMap SNPs and independently conducted association analyses of hemostasis measures using an additive genetic model. Study findings were combined by meta-analysis. Replication was conducted in 7604 participants not in the discovery cohort. For FVII, 305 SNPs exceeded the genome-wide significance threshold of 5.0x10(-8) and comprised 5 loci on 5 chromosomes: 2p23 (smallest P value 6.2x10(-24)), 4q25 (3.6x10(-12)), 11q12 (2.0x10(-10)), 13q34 (9.0x10(-259)), and 20q11.2 (5.7x10(-37)). Loci were within or near genes, including 4 new candidate genes and F7 (13q34). For vWF, 400 SNPs exceeded the threshold and marked 8 loci on 6 chromosomes: 6q24 (1.2x10(-22)), 8p21 (1.3x10(-16)), 9q34 (<5.0x10(-324)), 12p13 (1.7x10(-32)), 12q23 (7.3x10(-10)), 12q24.3 (3.8x10(-11)), 14q32 (2.3x10(-10)), and 19p13.2 (1.3x10(-9)). All loci were within genes, including 6 new candidate genes, as well as ABO (9q34) and VWF (12p13). For FVIII, 5 loci were identified and overlapped vWF findings. Nine of the 10 new findings were replicated.

CONCLUSIONS: New genetic associations were discovered outside previously known biological pathways and may point to novel prevention and treatment targets of hemostasis disorders.

%B Circulation %V 121 %P 1382-92 %8 2010 Mar 30 %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20231535?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.869156 %0 Journal Article %J J Alzheimers Dis %D 2011 %T Association of HSP70 and its co-chaperones with Alzheimer's disease. %A Broer, Linda %A Ikram, Mohammad Arfan %A Schuur, Maaike %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Liu, Fan %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Longstreth, William T %A Hofman, Albert %A Aulchenko, Yurii %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Oostra, Ben A %A Breteler, Monique M B %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Alzheimer Disease %K Cohort Studies %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Variation %K HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins %K Humans %K Middle Aged %K Molecular Chaperones %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

The heat shock protein (HSP) 70 family has been implicated in the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In this study, we examined common genetic variations in the 80 genes encoding HSP70 and its co-chaperones. We conducted a study in a series of 462 patients and 5238 unaffected participants derived from the Rotterdam Study, a population-based study including 7983 persons aged 55 years and older. We genotyped a total of 12,053 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) using the HumanHap550K Genotyping BeadChip from Illumina. Replication was performed in two independent cohort studies, the Framingham Heart study (FHS; n = 806) and Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS; n = 2150). When adjusting for multiple testing, we found a small but consistent, though not significant effect of rs12118313 located 32 kb from PFDN2, with an OR of 1.19 (p-value from meta-analysis = 0.003). However this SNP was in the intron of another gene, suggesting it is unlikely this SNP reflects the effect of PFDN2. In a formal pathway analysis we found nominally significant evidence for an association of BAG, DNAJA and prefoldin with AD. These findings corroborate with those of a study of 2032 AD patients and 5328 controls, in which several members of the prefoldin family showed evidence for association to AD. Our study did not reveal evidence for a genetic variant if the HSP70 family with a major effect on AD. However, our findings of the single SNP analysis and pathway analysis suggest that multiple genetic variants in prefoldin are associated with AD.

%B J Alzheimers Dis %V 25 %P 93-102 %8 2011 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21403392?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3233/JAD-2011-101560 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2011 %T Genetic loci associated with plasma phospholipid n-3 fatty acids: a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies from the CHARGE Consortium. %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Tang, Weihong %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Foy, Millennia %A Kabagambe, Edmond K %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A King, Irena B %A Weng, Lu-Chen %A Bhattacharya, Sayanti %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rich, Stephen S %A Jacobs, David R %A Cherubini, Antonio %A McKnight, Barbara %A Liang, Shuang %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Rice, Kenneth %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Lumley, Thomas %A Browning, Brian L %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Chen, Yii-der I %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Djoussé, Luc %A Wu, Jason H Y %A Siscovick, David S %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Arnett, Donna K %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Fornage, Myriam %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Steffen, Lyn M %K Alleles %K Continental Population Groups %K Fatty Acids, Omega-3 %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Metabolic Networks and Pathways %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) can derive from diet or from α-linolenic acid (ALA) by elongation and desaturation. We investigated the association of common genetic variation with plasma phospholipid levels of the four major n-3 PUFAs by performing genome-wide association studies in five population-based cohorts comprising 8,866 subjects of European ancestry. Minor alleles of SNPs in FADS1 and FADS2 (desaturases) were associated with higher levels of ALA (p = 3 x 10⁻⁶⁴) and lower levels of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, p = 5 x 10⁻⁵⁸) and docosapentaenoic acid (DPA, p = 4 x 10⁻¹⁵⁴). Minor alleles of SNPs in ELOVL2 (elongase) were associated with higher EPA (p = 2 x 10⁻¹²) and DPA (p = 1 x 10⁻⁴³) and lower docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, p = 1 x 10⁻¹⁵). In addition to genes in the n-3 pathway, we identified a novel association of DPA with several SNPs in GCKR (glucokinase regulator, p = 1 x 10⁻⁸). We observed a weaker association between ALA and EPA among carriers of the minor allele of a representative SNP in FADS2 (rs1535), suggesting a lower rate of ALA-to-EPA conversion in these subjects. In samples of African, Chinese, and Hispanic ancestry, associations of n-3 PUFAs were similar with a representative SNP in FADS1 but less consistent with a representative SNP in ELOVL2. Our findings show that common variation in n-3 metabolic pathway genes and in GCKR influences plasma phospholipid levels of n-3 PUFAs in populations of European ancestry and, for FADS1, in other ancestries.

%B PLoS Genet %V 7 %P e1002193 %8 2011 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21829377?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002193 %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2011 %T Genetic predictors of fibrin D-dimer levels in healthy adults. %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Strachan, David P %A Huang, Jie %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Trompet, Stella %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Shin, So-Youn %A Baumert, Jens %A Vitart, Veronique %A Bis, Joshua C %A Wild, Sarah H %A Rumley, Ann %A Yang, Qiong %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Stott, David J %A Davies, Gail %A Carter, Angela M %A Thorand, Barbara %A Polasek, Ozren %A McKnight, Barbara %A Campbell, Harry %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Harris, Sarah E %A Peters, Annette %A Pulanic, Drazen %A Lumley, Thomas %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Liewald, David C %A Gieger, Christian %A Campbell, Susan %A Ford, Ian %A Gow, Alan J %A Luciano, Michelle %A Porteous, David J %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Sattar, Naveed %A Tenesa, Albert %A Cushman, Mary %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Visscher, Peter M %A Spector, Tim D %A Illig, Thomas %A Rudan, Igor %A Bovill, Edwin G %A Wright, Alan F %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Tofler, Geoffrey %A Hofman, Albert %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Starr, John M %A Grant, Peter J %A Karakas, Mahir %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Wilson, James F %A Lowe, Gordon D O %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Deary, Ian J %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Hayward, Caroline %K Adult %K Aged %K Blood Coagulation %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Factor V %K Female %K Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products %K Fibrinogen %K Genetic Testing %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Reference Values %K Thromboplastin %X

BACKGROUND: Fibrin fragment D-dimer, one of several peptides produced when crosslinked fibrin is degraded by plasmin, is the most widely used clinical marker of activated blood coagulation. To identity genetic loci influencing D-dimer levels, we performed the first large-scale, genome-wide association search.

METHODS AND RESULTS: A genome-wide investigation of the genomic correlates of plasma D-dimer levels was conducted among 21 052 European-ancestry adults. Plasma levels of D-dimer were measured independently in each of 13 cohorts. Each study analyzed the association between ≈2.6 million genotyped and imputed variants across the 22 autosomal chromosomes and natural-log–transformed D-dimer levels using linear regression in additive genetic models adjusted for age and sex. Among all variants, 74 exceeded the genome-wide significance threshold and marked 3 regions. At 1p22, rs12029080 (P=6.4×10(-52)) was 46.0 kb upstream from F3, coagulation factor III (tissue factor). At 1q24, rs6687813 (P=2.4×10(-14)) was 79.7 kb downstream of F5, coagulation factor V. At 4q32, rs13109457 (P=2.9×10(-18)) was located between 2 fibrinogen genes: 10.4 kb downstream from FGG and 3.0 kb upstream from FGA. Variants were associated with a 0.099-, 0.096-, and 0.061-unit difference, respectively, in natural-log–transformed D-dimer and together accounted for 1.8% of the total variance. When adjusted for nonsynonymous substitutions in F5 and FGA loci known to be associated with D-dimer levels, there was no evidence of an additional association at either locus.

CONCLUSIONS: Three genes were associated with fibrin D-dimer levels. Of these 3, the F3 association was the strongest, and has not been previously reported.

%B Circulation %V 123 %P 1864-72 %8 2011 May 03 %G eng %N 17 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21502573?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.009480 %0 Journal Article %J Nature %D 2011 %T Genetic variants in novel pathways influence blood pressure and cardiovascular disease risk. %A Ehret, Georg B %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Bochud, Murielle %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Smith, Albert V %A Tobin, Martin D %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Pihur, Vasyl %A Vollenweider, Peter %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Amin, Najaf %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Teumer, Alexander %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Launer, Lenore %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Aulchenko, Yurii %A Heath, Simon %A Sõber, Siim %A Parsa, Afshin %A Luan, Jian'an %A Arora, Pankaj %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Zhang, Feng %A Lucas, Gavin %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Jackson, Anne U %A Peden, John F %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Wild, Sarah H %A Rudan, Igor %A Igl, Wilmar %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Parker, Alex N %A Fava, Cristiano %A Chambers, John C %A Fox, Ervin R %A Kumari, Meena %A Go, Min Jin %A van der Harst, Pim %A Kao, Wen Hong Linda %A Sjögren, Marketa %A Vinay, D G %A Alexander, Myriam %A Tabara, Yasuharu %A Shaw-Hawkins, Sue %A Whincup, Peter H %A Liu, Yongmei %A Shi, Gang %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Tayo, Bamidele %A Seielstad, Mark %A Sim, Xueling %A Nguyen, Khanh-Dung Hoang %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Matullo, Giuseppe %A Wu, Ying %A Gaunt, Tom R %A Onland-Moret, N Charlotte %A Cooper, Matthew N %A Platou, Carl G P %A Org, Elin %A Hardy, Rebecca %A Dahgam, Santosh %A Palmen, Jutta %A Vitart, Veronique %A Braund, Peter S %A Kuznetsova, Tatiana %A Uiterwaal, Cuno S P M %A Adeyemo, Adebowale %A Palmas, Walter %A Campbell, Harry %A Ludwig, Barbara %A Tomaszewski, Maciej %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Aspelund, Thor %A Garcia, Melissa %A Chang, Yen-Pei C %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Steinle, Nanette I %A Grobbee, Diederick E %A Arking, Dan E %A Kardia, Sharon L %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Hernandez, Dena %A Najjar, Samer %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Hadley, David %A Brown, Morris J %A Connell, John M %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Day, Ian N M %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Beilby, John P %A Lawrence, Robert W %A Clarke, Robert %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Ongen, Halit %A Dreisbach, Albert W %A Li, Yali %A Young, J Hunter %A Bis, Joshua C %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Adair, Linda S %A Lee, Nanette R %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Olden, Matthias %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Bolton, Judith A Hoffman %A Köttgen, Anna %A Bergmann, Sven %A Mooser, Vincent %A Chaturvedi, Nish %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Islam, Muhammad %A Jafar, Tazeen H %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Kulkarni, Smita R %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Grässler, Jürgen %A Groop, Leif %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Kettunen, Johannes %A Howard, Philip %A Taylor, Andrew %A Guarrera, Simonetta %A Ricceri, Fulvio %A Emilsson, Valur %A Plump, Andrew %A Barroso, Inês %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Weder, Alan B %A Hunt, Steven C %A Sun, Yan V %A Bergman, Richard N %A Collins, Francis S %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Scott, Laura J %A Stringham, Heather M %A Peltonen, Leena %A Perola, Markus %A Vartiainen, Erkki %A Brand, Stefan-Martin %A Staessen, Jan A %A Wang, Thomas J %A Burton, Paul R %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Dong, Yanbin %A Snieder, Harold %A Wang, Xiaoling %A Zhu, Haidong %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Rudock, Megan E %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Doumatey, Ayo %A Shriner, Daniel %A Veldre, Gudrun %A Viigimaa, Margus %A Kinra, Sanjay %A Prabhakaran, Dorairaj %A Tripathy, Vikal %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Rosengren, Annika %A Thelle, Dag S %A Corsi, Anna Maria %A Singleton, Andrew %A Forrester, Terrence %A Hilton, Gina %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Salako, Tunde %A Iwai, Naoharu %A Kita, Yoshikuni %A Ogihara, Toshio %A Ohkubo, Takayoshi %A Okamura, Tomonori %A Ueshima, Hirotsugu %A Umemura, Satoshi %A Eyheramendy, Susana %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Cho, Yoon Shin %A Kim, Hyung-Lae %A Lee, Jong-Young %A Scott, James %A Sehmi, Joban S %A Zhang, Weihua %A Hedblad, Bo %A Nilsson, Peter %A Smith, George Davey %A Wong, Andrew %A Narisu, Narisu %A Stančáková, Alena %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Yao, Jie %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Schwartz, Stephen M %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Longstreth, W T %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Shrine, Nick R G %A Wain, Louise V %A Morken, Mario A %A Swift, Amy J %A Laitinen, Jaana %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Zitting, Paavo %A Cooper, Jackie A %A Humphries, Steve E %A Danesh, John %A Rasheed, Asif %A Goel, Anuj %A Hamsten, Anders %A Watkins, Hugh %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Janipalli, Charles S %A Mani, K Radha %A Yajnik, Chittaranjan S %A Hofman, Albert %A Mattace-Raso, Francesco U S %A Oostra, Ben A %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Orrù, Marco %A Scuteri, Angelo %A Ala-Korpela, Mika %A Kangas, Antti J %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Soininen, Pasi %A Tukiainen, Taru %A Würtz, Peter %A Ong, Rick Twee-Hee %A Dörr, Marcus %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Galan, Pilar %A Hercberg, Serge %A Lathrop, Mark %A Zelenika, Diana %A Deloukas, Panos %A Mangino, Massimo %A Spector, Tim D %A Zhai, Guangju %A Meschia, James F %A Nalls, Michael A %A Sharma, Pankaj %A Terzic, Janos %A Kumar, M V Kranthi %A Denniff, Matthew %A Zukowska-Szczechowska, Ewa %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Fowkes, F Gerald R %A Charchar, Fadi J %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Hayward, Caroline %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Rotimi, Charles %A Bots, Michiel L %A Brand, Eva %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Polasek, Ozren %A Talmud, Philippa J %A Nyberg, Fredrik %A Kuh, Diana %A Laan, Maris %A Hveem, Kristian %A Palmer, Lyle J %A van der Schouw, Yvonne T %A Casas, Juan P %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Vineis, Paolo %A Raitakari, Olli %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Wong, Tien Y %A Tai, E Shyong %A Cooper, Richard S %A Laakso, Markku %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Harris, Tamara B %A Morris, Richard W %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Marmot, Michael G %A Miki, Tetsuro %A Saleheen, Danish %A Chandak, Giriraj R %A Coresh, Josef %A Navis, Gerjan %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Han, Bok-Ghee %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Melander, Olle %A Ridker, Paul M %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Gyllensten, Ulf B %A Wright, Alan F %A Wilson, James F %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Farrall, Martin %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Elosua, Roberto %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Altshuler, David %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Gieger, Christian %A Meneton, Pierre %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rettig, Rainer %A Uda, Manuela %A Strachan, David P %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Boehnke, Michael %A Larson, Martin G %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Elliott, Paul %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Levy, Daniel %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Johnson, Toby %K Africa %K Asia %K Blood Pressure %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Europe %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Kidney Diseases %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Stroke %X

Blood pressure is a heritable trait influenced by several biological pathways and responsive to environmental stimuli. Over one billion people worldwide have hypertension (≥140 mm Hg systolic blood pressure or  ≥90 mm Hg diastolic blood pressure). Even small increments in blood pressure are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events. This genome-wide association study of systolic and diastolic blood pressure, which used a multi-stage design in 200,000 individuals of European descent, identified sixteen novel loci: six of these loci contain genes previously known or suspected to regulate blood pressure (GUCY1A3-GUCY1B3, NPR3-C5orf23, ADM, FURIN-FES, GOSR2, GNAS-EDN3); the other ten provide new clues to blood pressure physiology. A genetic risk score based on 29 genome-wide significant variants was associated with hypertension, left ventricular wall thickness, stroke and coronary artery disease, but not kidney disease or kidney function. We also observed associations with blood pressure in East Asian, South Asian and African ancestry individuals. Our findings provide new insights into the genetics and biology of blood pressure, and suggest potential novel therapeutic pathways for cardiovascular disease prevention.

%B Nature %V 478 %P 103-9 %8 2011 Sep 11 %G eng %N 7367 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21909115?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/nature10405 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2011 %T Genetic variation near IRS1 associates with reduced adiposity and an impaired metabolic profile. %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Stančáková, Alena %A Finucane, Francis M %A Ried, Janina S %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Zhang, Weihua %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Luan, Jian'an %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Zhao, Jing-Hua %A Amin, Najaf %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Shin, So-Youn %A Haritunians, Talin %A Fu, Mao %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kumari, Meena %A Halldorsson, Bjarni V %A Tikkanen, Emmi %A Mangino, Massimo %A Hayward, Caroline %A Song, Ci %A Arnold, Alice M %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Oostra, Ben A %A Campbell, Harry %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Davis, Kathryn E %A Döring, Angela %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Estrada, Karol %A Fernández-Real, José Manuel %A Garcia, Melissa %A Gieger, Christian %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Guiducci, Candace %A Hofman, Albert %A Humphries, Steve E %A Isomaa, Bo %A Jacobs, Leonie C %A Jula, Antti %A Karasik, David %A Karlsson, Magnus K %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kim, Lauren J %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Klopp, Norman %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Liu, Yongmei %A Ljunggren, Osten %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Luben, Robert N %A McKnight, Barbara %A Mellström, Dan %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Mooser, Vincent %A Moreno, José Maria %A Männistö, Satu %A O'Connell, Jeffery R %A Pascoe, Laura %A Peltonen, Leena %A Peral, Belén %A Perola, Markus %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Savage, David B %A Semple, Robert K %A Skaric-Juric, Tatjana %A Sigurdsson, Gunnar %A Song, Kijoung S %A Spector, Timothy D %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Talmud, Philippa J %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Vidal-Puig, Antonio %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wright, Alan F %A Clegg, Deborah J %A Schadt, Eric %A Wilson, James F %A Rudan, Igor %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Jansson, John-Olov %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Groop, Leif %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Walker, Mark %A Barroso, Inês %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Chambers, John C %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Stefansson, Kari %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Ohlsson, Claes %A O'Rahilly, Stephen %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A Fox, Caroline S %A Laakso, Markku %A Loos, Ruth J F %K Adiponectin %K Adiposity %K Alleles %K Body Fat Distribution %K Body Mass Index %K Body Weight %K Female %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Insulin Receptor Substrate Proteins %K Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins %K Male %K Membrane Proteins %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Metabolome %K Obesity %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Subcutaneous Fat %X

Genome-wide association studies have identified 32 loci influencing body mass index, but this measure does not distinguish lean from fat mass. To identify adiposity loci, we meta-analyzed associations between ∼2.5 million SNPs and body fat percentage from 36,626 individuals and followed up the 14 most significant (P < 10(-6)) independent loci in 39,576 individuals. We confirmed a previously established adiposity locus in FTO (P = 3 × 10(-26)) and identified two new loci associated with body fat percentage, one near IRS1 (P = 4 × 10(-11)) and one near SPRY2 (P = 3 × 10(-8)). Both loci contain genes with potential links to adipocyte physiology. Notably, the body-fat-decreasing allele near IRS1 is associated with decreased IRS1 expression and with an impaired metabolic profile, including an increased visceral to subcutaneous fat ratio, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, risk of diabetes and coronary artery disease and decreased adiponectin levels. Our findings provide new insights into adiposity and insulin resistance.

%B Nat Genet %V 43 %P 753-60 %8 2011 Jun 26 %G eng %N 8 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21706003?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.866 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2011 %T Genome-wide association and large-scale follow up identifies 16 new loci influencing lung function. %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Loth, Daan W %A Wain, Louise V %A Gharib, Sina A %A Obeidat, Ma'en %A Tang, Wenbo %A Zhai, Guangju %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Albrecht, Eva %A Jackson, Catherine M %A Evans, David M %A Cadby, Gemma %A Fornage, Myriam %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Johnson, Toby %A Aldrich, Melinda C %A Aspelund, Thor %A Barroso, Inês %A Campbell, Harry %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Couper, David J %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Franceschini, Nora %A Garcia, Melissa %A Gieger, Christian %A Gislason, Gauti Kjartan %A Grkovic, Ivica %A Hammond, Christopher J %A Hancock, Dana B %A Harris, Tamara B %A Ramasamy, Adaikalavan %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Heliövaara, Markku %A Homuth, Georg %A Hysi, Pirro G %A James, Alan L %A Jankovic, Stipan %A Joubert, Bonnie R %A Karrasch, Stefan %A Klopp, Norman %A Koch, Beate %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Liu, Yongmei %A Loehr, Laura R %A Lohman, Kurt %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lumley, Thomas %A Al Balushi, Khalid A %A Ang, Wei Q %A Barr, R Graham %A Beilby, John %A Blakey, John D %A Boban, Mladen %A Boraska, Vesna %A Brisman, Jonas %A Britton, John R %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Curjuric, Ivan %A Dahgam, Santosh %A Deary, Ian J %A Ebrahim, Shah %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Francks, Clyde %A Gaysina, Darya %A Granell, Raquel %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Hankinson, John L %A Hardy, Rebecca %A Harris, Sarah E %A Henderson, John %A Henry, Amanda %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Hofman, Albert %A Holt, Patrick G %A Hui, Jennie %A Hunter, Michael L %A Imboden, Medea %A Jameson, Karen A %A Kerr, Shona M %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Liu, Jason Z %A Marchini, Jonathan %A McKeever, Tricia %A Morris, Andrew D %A Olin, Anna-Carin %A Porteous, David J %A Postma, Dirkje S %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ring, Susan M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rochat, Thierry %A Sayer, Avan Aihie %A Sayers, Ian %A Sly, Peter D %A Smith, George Davey %A Sood, Akshay %A Starr, John M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vonk, Judith M %A Wannamethee, S Goya %A Whincup, Peter H %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Williams, O Dale %A Wong, Andrew %A Mangino, Massimo %A Marciante, Kristin D %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Meibohm, Bernd %A Morrison, Alanna C %A North, Kari E %A Omenaas, Ernst %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Pietiläinen, Kirsi H %A Pin, Isabelle %A Pola Sbreve Ek, Ozren %A Pouta, Anneli %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Rantanen, Taina %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Schulz, Holger %A Shin, So-Youn %A Spector, Tim D %A Surakka, Ida %A Vitart, Veronique %A Völzke, Henry %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Warrington, Nicole M %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Wjst, Matthias %A Wright, Alan F %A Zgaga, Lina %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Pennell, Craig E %A Nyberg, Fredrik %A Kuh, Diana %A Holloway, John W %A Boezen, H Marike %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Morris, Richard W %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Wilson, James F %A Hayward, Caroline %A Kähönen, Mika %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Musk, Arthur W %A Jarvis, Deborah L %A Gläser, Sven %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Ch Stricker, Bruno H %A Elliott, Paul %A O'Connor, George T %A Strachan, David P %A London, Stephanie J %A Hall, Ian P %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Tobin, Martin D %K Child %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive %K Respiratory Function Tests %X

Pulmonary function measures reflect respiratory health and are used in the diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. We tested genome-wide association with forced expiratory volume in 1 second and the ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 second to forced vital capacity in 48,201 individuals of European ancestry with follow up of the top associations in up to an additional 46,411 individuals. We identified new regions showing association (combined P < 5 × 10(-8)) with pulmonary function in or near MFAP2, TGFB2, HDAC4, RARB, MECOM (also known as EVI1), SPATA9, ARMC2, NCR3, ZKSCAN3, CDC123, C10orf11, LRP1, CCDC38, MMP15, CFDP1 and KCNE2. Identification of these 16 new loci may provide insight into the molecular mechanisms regulating pulmonary function and into molecular targets for future therapy to alleviate reduced lung function.

%B Nat Genet %V 43 %P 1082-90 %8 2011 Sep 25 %G eng %N 11 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21946350?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.941 %0 Journal Article %J Ann Neurol %D 2011 %T Genome-wide association studies of cerebral white matter lesion burden: the CHARGE consortium. %A Fornage, Myriam %A Debette, Stephanie %A Bis, Joshua C %A Schmidt, Helena %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Dufouil, Carole %A Sigurdsson, Sigurdur %A Lumley, Thomas %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Fazekas, Franz %A Vrooman, Henri A %A Shibata, Dean K %A Maillard, Pauline %A Zijdenbos, Alex %A Smith, Albert V %A Gudnason, Haukur %A de Boer, Renske %A Cushman, Mary %A Mazoyer, Bernard %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Enzinger, Christian %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Beiser, Alexa %A Knopman, David S %A Cavalieri, Margherita %A Niessen, Wiro J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Petrovic, Katja %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Au, Rhoda %A Lambert, Jean-Charles %A Hofman, Albert %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Garcia, Melissa %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Atwood, Larry D %A Catellier, Diane J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Yang, Qiong %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Aspelund, Thor %A Romero, Jose R %A Rice, Kenneth %A Taylor, Kent D %A Nalls, Michael A %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sharrett, Richey %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Wolf, Philip A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A van der Lugt, Aad %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Breteler, Monique M B %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Longstreth, W T %A DeCarli, Charles %A Launer, Lenore J %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cerebral Cortex %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17 %K Cognition Disorders %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Leukoencephalopathies %K Magnetic Resonance Imaging %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Movement Disorders %K Nerve Fibers, Myelinated %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Residence Characteristics %K RNA, Messenger %X

OBJECTIVE: White matter hyperintensities (WMHs) detectable by magnetic resonance imaging are part of the spectrum of vascular injury associated with aging of the brain and are thought to reflect ischemic damage to the small deep cerebral vessels. WMHs are associated with an increased risk of cognitive and motor dysfunction, dementia, depression, and stroke. Despite a significant heritability, few genetic loci influencing WMH burden have been identified.

METHODS: We performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) for WMH burden in 9,361 stroke-free individuals of European descent from 7 community-based cohorts. Significant findings were tested for replication in 3,024 individuals from 2 additional cohorts.

RESULTS: We identified 6 novel risk-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 1 locus on chromosome 17q25 encompassing 6 known genes including WBP2, TRIM65, TRIM47, MRPL38, FBF1, and ACOX1. The most significant association was for rs3744028 (p(discovery) = 4.0 × 10(-9) ; p(replication) = 1.3 × 10(-7) ; p(combined) = 4.0 × 10(-15) ). Other SNPs in this region also reaching genome-wide significance were rs9894383 (p = 5.3 × 10(-9) ), rs11869977 (p = 5.7 × 10(-9) ), rs936393 (p = 6.8 × 10(-9) ), rs3744017 (p = 7.3 × 10(-9) ), and rs1055129 (p = 4.1 × 10(-8) ). Variant alleles at these loci conferred a small increase in WMH burden (4-8% of the overall mean WMH burden in the sample).

INTERPRETATION: This large GWAS of WMH burden in community-based cohorts of individuals of European descent identifies a novel locus on chromosome 17. Further characterization of this locus may provide novel insights into the pathogenesis of cerebral WMH.

%B Ann Neurol %V 69 %P 928-39 %8 2011 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21681796?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1002/ana.22403 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2011 %T Genome-wide association study identifies six new loci influencing pulse pressure and mean arterial pressure. %A Wain, Louise V %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Shi, Gang %A Johnson, Toby %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Bochud, Murielle %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Henneman, Peter %A Smith, Albert V %A Ehret, Georg B %A Amin, Najaf %A Larson, Martin G %A Mooser, Vincent %A Hadley, David %A Dörr, Marcus %A Bis, Joshua C %A Aspelund, Thor %A Esko, Tõnu %A Janssens, A Cecile J W %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Heath, Simon %A Laan, Maris %A Fu, Jingyuan %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Luan, Jian'an %A Arora, Pankaj %A Lucas, Gavin %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Pichler, Irene %A Jackson, Anne U %A Webster, Rebecca J %A Zhang, Feng %A Peden, John F %A Schmidt, Helena %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Campbell, Harry %A Igl, Wilmar %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Vitart, Veronique %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Trompet, Stella %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Alizadeh, Behrooz Z %A Chambers, John C %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Polasek, Ozren %A Boban, Mladen %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Pihur, Vasyl %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Hofman, Albert %A Kundu, Suman %A Mattace-Raso, Francesco U S %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Wang, Thomas J %A Bergmann, Sven %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Laitinen, Jaana %A Pouta, Anneli %A Zitting, Paavo %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Taylor, Kent D %A Harris, Tamara B %A Alavere, Helene %A Haller, Toomas %A Keis, Aime %A Tammesoo, Mari-Liis %A Aulchenko, Yurii %A Barroso, Inês %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Galan, Pilar %A Hercberg, Serge %A Lathrop, Mark %A Eyheramendy, Susana %A Org, Elin %A Sõber, Siim %A Lu, Xiaowen %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Corre, Tanguy %A Masciullo, Corrado %A Sala, Cinzia %A Groop, Leif %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Melander, Olle %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Salomaa, Veikko %A d'Adamo, Adamo Pio %A Fabretto, Antonella %A Faletra, Flavio %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Del Greco, Fabiola M %A Facheris, Maurizio %A Collins, Francis S %A Bergman, Richard N %A Beilby, John P %A Hung, Joseph %A Musk, A William %A Mangino, Massimo %A Shin, So-Youn %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Watkins, Hugh %A Goel, Anuj %A Hamsten, Anders %A Gider, Pierre %A Loitfelder, Marisa %A Zeginigg, Marion %A Hernandez, Dena %A Najjar, Samer S %A Navarro, Pau %A Wild, Sarah H %A Corsi, Anna Maria %A Singleton, Andrew %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Parker, Alex N %A Rose, Lynda M %A Buckley, Brendan %A Stott, David %A Orrù, Marco %A Uda, Manuela %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A Zhang, Weihua %A Li, Xinzhong %A Scott, James %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Burke, Gregory L %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Döring, Angela %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Davies, Gail %A Starr, John M %A Emilsson, Valur %A Plump, Andrew %A Lindeman, Jan H %A Hoen, Peter A C 't %A König, Inke R %A Felix, Janine F %A Clarke, Robert %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Ongen, Halit %A Breteler, Monique %A Debette, Stephanie %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Fornage, Myriam %A Mitchell, Gary F %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Holm, Hilma %A Stefansson, Kari %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Preuss, Michael %A Rudan, Igor %A Hayward, Caroline %A Deary, Ian J %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Palmas, Walter %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Wright, Alan F %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Gyllensten, Ulf B %A Wilson, James F %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Farrall, Martin %A Spector, Tim D %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Siscovick, David %A Altshuler, David %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Snieder, Harold %A Gieger, Christian %A Meneton, Pierre %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Oostra, Ben A %A Metspalu, Andres %A Launer, Lenore %A Rettig, Rainer %A Strachan, David P %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A van Dijk, Ko Willems %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Boehnke, Michael %A Ridker, Paul M %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Levy, Daniel %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Tobin, Martin D %A Elliott, Paul %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %K Arteries %K Blood Pressure %K Case-Control Studies %K Follow-Up Studies %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Linkage Disequilibrium %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Numerous genetic loci have been associated with systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) in Europeans. We now report genome-wide association studies of pulse pressure (PP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP). In discovery (N = 74,064) and follow-up studies (N = 48,607), we identified at genome-wide significance (P = 2.7 × 10(-8) to P = 2.3 × 10(-13)) four new PP loci (at 4q12 near CHIC2, 7q22.3 near PIK3CG, 8q24.12 in NOV and 11q24.3 near ADAMTS8), two new MAP loci (3p21.31 in MAP4 and 10q25.3 near ADRB1) and one locus associated with both of these traits (2q24.3 near FIGN) that has also recently been associated with SBP in east Asians. For three of the new PP loci, the estimated effect for SBP was opposite of that for DBP, in contrast to the majority of common SBP- and DBP-associated variants, which show concordant effects on both traits. These findings suggest new genetic pathways underlying blood pressure variation, some of which may differentially influence SBP and DBP.

%B Nat Genet %V 43 %P 1005-11 %8 2011 Sep 11 %G eng %N 10 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21909110?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.922 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2011 %T Identification of a sudden cardiac death susceptibility locus at 2q24.2 through genome-wide association in European ancestry individuals. %A Arking, Dan E %A Junttila, M Juhani %A Goyette, Philippe %A Huertas-Vazquez, Adriana %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Blom, Marieke T %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Reinier, Kyndaron %A Teodorescu, Carmen %A Uy-Evanado, Audrey %A Carter-Monroe, Naima %A Kaikkonen, Kari S %A Kortelainen, Marja-Leena %A Boucher, Gabrielle %A Lagacé, Caroline %A Moes, Anna %A Zhao, XiaoQing %A Kolodgie, Frank %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Marsman, Roos F %A Pazoki, Raha %A Bardai, Abdennasser %A Koster, Rudolph W %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Bhatnagar, Pallav %A Post, Wendy %A Hilton, Gina %A Prineas, Ronald J %A Li, Man %A Köttgen, Anna %A Ehret, Georg %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Coresh, Josef %A Kao, W H Linda %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tomaselli, Gordon F %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Siscovick, David S %A Burke, Greg L %A Marbán, Eduardo %A Spooner, Peter M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Jui, Jonathan %A Gunson, Karen %A Kesaniemi, Y Antero %A Wilde, Arthur A M %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Bezzina, Connie R %A Virmani, Renu %A Stricker, Bruno H C H %A Tan, Hanno L %A Albert, Christine M %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Rioux, John D %A Huikuri, Heikki V %A Chugh, Sumeet S %K Adult %K Aged %K Alleles %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 %K Death, Sudden, Cardiac %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Myocardial Contraction %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) continues to be one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide, with an annual incidence estimated at 250,000-300,000 in the United States and with the vast majority occurring in the setting of coronary disease. We performed a genome-wide association meta-analysis in 1,283 SCD cases and >20,000 control individuals of European ancestry from 5 studies, with follow-up genotyping in up to 3,119 SCD cases and 11,146 controls from 11 European ancestry studies, and identify the BAZ2B locus as associated with SCD (P = 1.8×10(-10)). The risk allele, while ancestral, has a frequency of ~1.4%, suggesting strong negative selection and increases risk for SCD by 1.92-fold per allele (95% CI 1.57-2.34). We also tested the role of 49 SNPs previously implicated in modulating electrocardiographic traits (QRS, QT, and RR intervals). Consistent with epidemiological studies showing increased risk of SCD with prolonged QRS/QT intervals, the interval-prolonging alleles are in aggregate associated with increased risk for SCD (P = 0.006).

%B PLoS Genet %V 7 %P e1002158 %8 2011 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21738491?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002158 %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2011 %T Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in >80 000 subjects identifies multiple loci for C-reactive protein levels. %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Dupuis, Josée %A Barbalic, Maja %A Bis, Joshua C %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Lu, Chen %A Pellikka, Niina %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Kettunen, Johannes %A Henneman, Peter %A Baumert, Jens %A Strachan, David P %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Vitart, Veronique %A Wilson, James F %A Paré, Guillaume %A Naitza, Silvia %A Rudock, Megan E %A Surakka, Ida %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Alizadeh, Behrooz Z %A Guralnik, Jack %A Shuldiner, Alan %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Zee, Robert Y L %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Nambi, Vijay %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Nauck, Matthias %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Smith, Albert V %A Sundvall, Jouko %A Scheet, Paul %A Liu, Yongmei %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Rose, Lynda M %A Larson, Martin G %A Hoogeveen, Ron C %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Teumer, Alexander %A Tracy, Russell P %A Launer, Lenore J %A Buring, Julie E %A Yamamoto, Jennifer F %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Pankow, James %A Elliott, Paul %A Keaney, John F %A Sun, Wei %A Sarin, Antti-Pekka %A Fontes, João D %A Badola, Sunita %A Astor, Brad C %A Hofman, Albert %A Pouta, Anneli %A Werdan, Karl %A Greiser, Karin H %A Kuss, Oliver %A Meyer zu Schwabedissen, Henriette E %A Thiery, Joachim %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Spector, Timothy D %A Völzke, Henry %A Parker, Alexander N %A Aspelund, Thor %A Bates, David %A Young, Lauren %A Tsui, Kim %A Siscovick, David S %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Uda, Manuela %A Schlessinger, David %A Rudan, Igor %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Thorand, Barbara %A Gieger, Christian %A Coresh, Joe %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Harris, Tamara B %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Rice, Kenneth %A Radke, Dörte %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Willems van Dijk, Ko %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gibson, Quince D %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Snieder, Harold %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Xiao, Xiangjun %A Campbell, Harry %A Hayward, Caroline %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Peltonen, Leena %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Ridker, Paul M %A Homuth, Georg %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Perola, Markus %A Chasman, Daniel I %K Biomarkers %K C-Reactive Protein %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Risk Factors %K Vasculitis %X

BACKGROUND: C-reactive protein (CRP) is a heritable marker of chronic inflammation that is strongly associated with cardiovascular disease. We sought to identify genetic variants that are associated with CRP levels.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a genome-wide association analysis of CRP in 66 185 participants from 15 population-based studies. We sought replication for the genome-wide significant and suggestive loci in a replication panel comprising 16 540 individuals from 10 independent studies. We found 18 genome-wide significant loci, and we provided evidence of replication for 8 of them. Our results confirm 7 previously known loci and introduce 11 novel loci that are implicated in pathways related to the metabolic syndrome (APOC1, HNF1A, LEPR, GCKR, HNF4A, and PTPN2) or the immune system (CRP, IL6R, NLRP3, IL1F10, and IRF1) or that reside in regions previously not known to play a role in chronic inflammation (PPP1R3B, SALL1, PABPC4, ASCL1, RORA, and BCL7B). We found a significant interaction of body mass index with LEPR (P<2.9×10(-6)). A weighted genetic risk score that was developed to summarize the effect of risk alleles was strongly associated with CRP levels and explained ≈5% of the trait variance; however, there was no evidence for these genetic variants explaining the association of CRP with coronary heart disease.

CONCLUSIONS: We identified 18 loci that were associated with CRP levels. Our study highlights immune response and metabolic regulatory pathways involved in the regulation of chronic inflammation.

%B Circulation %V 123 %P 731-8 %8 2011 Feb 22 %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21300955?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.948570 %0 Journal Article %J Diabetes %D 2011 %T Total zinc intake may modify the glucose-raising effect of a zinc transporter (SLC30A8) variant: a 14-cohort meta-analysis. %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A Hivert, Marie-France %A Ye, Zheng %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Anderson, Jennifer S %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Hindy, George %A Saylor, Georgia %A Renstrom, Frida %A Bennett, Amanda J %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Florez, Jose C %A Fox, Caroline S %A Hofman, Albert %A Hoogeveen, Ron C %A Houston, Denise K %A Hu, Frank B %A Jacques, Paul F %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Lind, Lars %A Liu, Yongmei %A McKeown, Nicola %A Ordovas, Jose %A Pankow, James S %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Yannakoulia, Mary %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Wareham, Nick J %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Loos, Ruth J %A Hallmans, Göran %A Dupuis, Josée %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Siscovick, David S %A Meigs, James B %A Franks, Paul W %A Dedoussis, George V %K Blood Glucose %K Cation Transport Proteins %K Cohort Studies %K Humans %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Zinc %K Zinc Transporter 8 %X

OBJECTIVE: Many genetic variants have been associated with glucose homeostasis and type 2 diabetes in genome-wide association studies. Zinc is an essential micronutrient that is important for β-cell function and glucose homeostasis. We tested the hypothesis that zinc intake could influence the glucose-raising effect of specific variants.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We conducted a 14-cohort meta-analysis to assess the interaction of 20 genetic variants known to be related to glycemic traits and zinc metabolism with dietary zinc intake (food sources) and a 5-cohort meta-analysis to assess the interaction with total zinc intake (food sources and supplements) on fasting glucose levels among individuals of European ancestry without diabetes.

RESULTS: We observed a significant association of total zinc intake with lower fasting glucose levels (β-coefficient ± SE per 1 mg/day of zinc intake: -0.0012 ± 0.0003 mmol/L, summary P value = 0.0003), while the association of dietary zinc intake was not significant. We identified a nominally significant interaction between total zinc intake and the SLC30A8 rs11558471 variant on fasting glucose levels (β-coefficient ± SE per A allele for 1 mg/day of greater total zinc intake: -0.0017 ± 0.0006 mmol/L, summary interaction P value = 0.005); this result suggests a stronger inverse association between total zinc intake and fasting glucose in individuals carrying the glucose-raising A allele compared with individuals who do not carry it. None of the other interaction tests were statistically significant.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that higher total zinc intake may attenuate the glucose-raising effect of the rs11558471 SLC30A8 (zinc transporter) variant. Our findings also support evidence for the association of higher total zinc intake with lower fasting glucose levels.

%B Diabetes %V 60 %P 2407-16 %8 2011 Sep %G eng %N 9 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21810599?dopt=Abstract %R 10.2337/db11-0176 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2012 %T Association between chromosome 9p21 variants and the ankle-brachial index identified by a meta-analysis of 21 genome-wide association studies. %A Murabito, Joanne M %A White, Charles C %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Sun, Yan V %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Nambi, Vijay %A Lamina, Claudia %A Schillert, Arne %A Coassin, Stefan %A Bis, Joshua C %A Broer, Linda %A Crawford, Dana C %A Franceschini, Nora %A Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth %A Haun, Margot %A Holewijn, Suzanne %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Kiechl, Stefan %A Kollerits, Barbara %A Montasser, May E %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Rudock, Megan E %A Senft, Andrea %A Teumer, Alexander %A van der Harst, Pim %A Vitart, Veronique %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Wood, Andrew R %A Wassel, Christina L %A Absher, Devin M %A Allison, Matthew A %A Amin, Najaf %A Arnold, Alice %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Aulchenko, Yurii %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Barbalic, Maja %A Boban, Mladen %A Brown-Gentry, Kristin %A Couper, David J %A Criqui, Michael H %A Dehghan, Abbas %A den Heijer, Martin %A Dieplinger, Benjamin %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Dörr, Marcus %A Espinola-Klein, Christine %A Felix, Stephan B %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Fraedrich, Gustav %A Gibson, Quince %A Goodloe, Robert %A Gunjaca, Grgo %A Haltmayer, Meinhard %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Hofman, Albert %A Kieback, Arne %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kullo, Iftikhar J %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Lackner, Karl J %A Li, Xiaohui %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Lohman, Kurt %A Meisinger, Christa %A Melzer, David %A Mohler, Emile R %A Mudnic, Ivana %A Mueller, Thomas %A Navis, Gerjan %A Oberhollenzer, Friedrich %A Olin, Jeffrey W %A O'Connell, Jeff %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Palmas, Walter %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Polasek, Ozren %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rantner, Barbara %A Rice, Ken %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Seldenrijk, Adrie %A Stadler, Marietta %A Summerer, Monika %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Tybjaerg-Hansen, Anne %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wild, Philipp S %A Willeit, Johann %A Zeller, Tanja %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Zgaga, Lina %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Blankenberg, Stefan %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Campbell, Harry %A Cooke, John P %A de Graaf, Jacqueline %A Herrington, David %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Murray, Anna %A Münzel, Thomas %A Newman, Anne B %A Oostra, Ben A %A Rudan, Igor %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Snieder, Harold %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Völker, Uwe %A Wright, Alan F %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Wilson, James F %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Liu, Yongmei %A Hayward, Caroline %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Ziegler, Andreas %A North, Kari E %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Kronenberg, Florian %K Adult %K Age Factors %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Alleles %K Ankle Brachial Index %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9 %K Cohort Studies %K Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p15 %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K HapMap Project %K Humans %K Logistic Models %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Peripheral Vascular Diseases %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %K Sex Factors %X

BACKGROUND: Genetic determinants of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) remain largely unknown. To identify genetic variants associated with the ankle-brachial index (ABI), a noninvasive measure of PAD, we conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association study data from 21 population-based cohorts.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Continuous ABI and PAD (ABI ≤0.9) phenotypes adjusted for age and sex were examined. Each study conducted genotyping and imputed data to the ≈2.5 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in HapMap. Linear and logistic regression models were used to test each SNP for association with ABI and PAD using additive genetic models. Study-specific data were combined using fixed effects inverse variance weighted meta-analyses. There were a total of 41 692 participants of European ancestry (≈60% women, mean ABI 1.02 to 1.19), including 3409 participants with PAD and with genome-wide association study data available. In the discovery meta-analysis, rs10757269 on chromosome 9 near CDKN2B had the strongest association with ABI (β=-0.006, P=2.46×10(-8)). We sought replication of the 6 strongest SNP associations in 5 population-based studies and 3 clinical samples (n=16 717). The association for rs10757269 strengthened in the combined discovery and replication analysis (P=2.65×10(-9)). No other SNP associations for ABI or PAD achieved genome-wide significance. However, 2 previously reported candidate genes for PAD and 1 SNP associated with coronary artery disease were associated with ABI: DAB21P (rs13290547, P=3.6×10(-5)), CYBA (rs3794624, P=6.3×10(-5)), and rs1122608 (LDLR, P=0.0026).

CONCLUSIONS: Genome-wide association studies in more than 40 000 individuals identified 1 genome wide significant association on chromosome 9p21 with ABI. Two candidate genes for PAD and 1 SNP for coronary artery disease are associated with ABI.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 5 %P 100-12 %8 2012 Feb 01 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22199011?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.111.961292 %0 Journal Article %J Eur Heart J %D 2012 %T Eight genetic loci associated with variation in lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 mass and activity and coronary heart disease: meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies from five community-based studies. %A Grallert, Harald %A Dupuis, Josée %A Bis, Joshua C %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Barbalic, Maja %A Baumert, Jens %A Lu, Chen %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Roberts, Robert %A Khuseyinova, Natalie %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hoogeveen, Ron C %A Fontes, João Daniel %A Meisinger, Christa %A Keaney, John F %A Lemaitre, Rozenn %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Ellis, Stephen %A Hazen, Stanley L %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Nelson, Jeanenne J %A März, Winfried %A Schunkert, Heribert %A McPherson, Ruth M %A Stirnadel-Farrant, Heide A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Gieger, Christian %A Siscovick, David %A Hofman, Albert %A Illig, Thomas %A Cushman, Mary %A Yamamoto, Jennifer F %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Larson, Martin G %A Stewart, Alexandre F R %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Tracy, Russell P %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Ballantyne, Christie M %K 1-Alkyl-2-acetylglycerophosphocholine Esterase %K Aged %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Coronary Disease %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Phospholipases A2 %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

AIMS: Lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) generates proinflammatory and proatherogenic compounds in the arterial vascular wall and is a potential therapeutic target in coronary heart disease (CHD). We searched for genetic loci related to Lp-PLA2 mass or activity by a genome-wide association study as part of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium.

METHODS AND RESULTS: In meta-analyses of findings from five population-based studies, comprising 13 664 subjects, variants at two loci (PLA2G7, CETP) were associated with Lp-PLA2 mass. The strongest signal was at rs1805017 in PLA2G7 [P = 2.4 × 10(-23), log Lp-PLA2 difference per allele (beta): 0.043]. Variants at six loci were associated with Lp-PLA2 activity (PLA2G7, APOC1, CELSR2, LDL, ZNF259, SCARB1), among which the strongest signals were at rs4420638, near the APOE-APOC1-APOC4-APOC2 cluster [P = 4.9 × 10(-30); log Lp-PLA2 difference per allele (beta): -0.054]. There were no significant gene-environment interactions between these eight polymorphisms associated with Lp-PLA2 mass or activity and age, sex, body mass index, or smoking status. Four of the polymorphisms (in APOC1, CELSR2, SCARB1, ZNF259), but not PLA2G7, were significantly associated with CHD in a second study.

CONCLUSION: Levels of Lp-PLA2 mass and activity were associated with PLA2G7, the gene coding for this protein. Lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 activity was also strongly associated with genetic variants related to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels.

%B Eur Heart J %V 33 %P 238-51 %8 2012 Jan %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22003152?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/eurheartj/ehr372 %0 Journal Article %J Nature %D 2012 %T FTO genotype is associated with phenotypic variability of body mass index. %A Yang, Jian %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Powell, Joseph E %A Medland, Sarah E %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Rose, Lynda M %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Mägi, Reedik %A Waite, Lindsay %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Monda, Keri L %A Hadley, David %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Li, Guo %A Kapur, Karen %A Vitart, Veronique %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Wang, Sophie R %A Palmer, Cameron %A Esko, Tõnu %A Fischer, Krista %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Luan, Jian'an %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A White, Charles %A Jackson, Anne U %A Preuss, Michael %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Eriksson, Joel %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Frau, Francesca %A Nolte, Ilja M %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Jacobs, Kevin B %A Verweij, Niek %A Goel, Anuj %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Estrada, Karol %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer Lynn %A Sanna, Serena %A Sidore, Carlo %A Tyrer, Jonathan %A Teumer, Alexander %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Mangino, Massimo %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Hui, Jennie %A Beilby, John P %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Hall, Per %A Haritunians, Talin %A Zgaga, Lina %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Polasek, Ozren %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Oostra, Ben A %A Junttila, M Juhani %A Grönberg, Henrik %A Schreiber, Stefan %A Peters, Annette %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Stephens, Jonathan %A Foad, Nicola S %A Laitinen, Jaana %A Pouta, Anneli %A Kaakinen, Marika %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Vink, Jacqueline M %A Wild, Sarah H %A Navis, Gerjan %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Homuth, Georg %A John, Ulrich %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Harris, Tamara %A Launer, Lenore %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Cadby, Gemma %A Palmer, Lyle J %A James, Alan L %A Musk, Arthur W %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Waeber, Gérard %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Hayward, Caroline %A Wright, Alan F %A Rudan, Igor %A Groop, Leif C %A Metspalu, Andres %A Khaw, Kay Tee %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Province, Michael A %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Huikuri, Heikki V %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Atwood, Larry D %A Fox, Caroline S %A Boehnke, Michael %A Collins, Francis S %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Stark, Klaus %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Cusi, Daniele %A Staessen, Jan A %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Jolley, Jennifer D %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Penninx, Brenda %A Wilson, James F %A Campbell, Harry %A Chanock, Stephen J %A van der Harst, Pim %A Hamsten, Anders %A Watkins, Hugh %A Hofman, Albert %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Schlessinger, David %A Schipf, Sabine %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Tönjes, Anke %A Spector, Tim D %A North, Kari E %A Lettre, Guillaume %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Berndt, Sonja I %A Heath, Andrew C %A Madden, Pamela A F %A Nyholt, Dale R %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Martin, Nicholas G %A McKnight, Barbara %A Strachan, David P %A Hill, William G %A Snieder, Harold %A Ridker, Paul M %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Stefansson, Kari %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Goddard, Michael E %A Visscher, Peter M %K Alpha-Ketoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase FTO %K Body Height %K Body Mass Index %K Co-Repressor Proteins %K Female %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proteins %K Repressor Proteins %X

There is evidence across several species for genetic control of phenotypic variation of complex traits, such that the variance among phenotypes is genotype dependent. Understanding genetic control of variability is important in evolutionary biology, agricultural selection programmes and human medicine, yet for complex traits, no individual genetic variants associated with variance, as opposed to the mean, have been identified. Here we perform a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of phenotypic variation using ∼170,000 samples on height and body mass index (BMI) in human populations. We report evidence that the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs7202116 at the FTO gene locus, which is known to be associated with obesity (as measured by mean BMI for each rs7202116 genotype), is also associated with phenotypic variability. We show that the results are not due to scale effects or other artefacts, and find no other experiment-wise significant evidence for effects on variability, either at loci other than FTO for BMI or at any locus for height. The difference in variance for BMI among individuals with opposite homozygous genotypes at the FTO locus is approximately 7%, corresponding to a difference of ∼0.5 kilograms in the standard deviation of weight. Our results indicate that genetic variants can be discovered that are associated with variability, and that between-person variability in obesity can partly be explained by the genotype at the FTO locus. The results are consistent with reported FTO by environment interactions for BMI, possibly mediated by DNA methylation. Our BMI results for other SNPs and our height results for all SNPs suggest that most genetic variants, including those that influence mean height or mean BMI, are not associated with phenotypic variance, or that their effects on variability are too small to detect even with samples sizes greater than 100,000.

%B Nature %V 490 %P 267-72 %8 2012 Oct 11 %G eng %N 7419 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22982992?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/nature11401 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2012 %T Genome-wide association and functional follow-up reveals new loci for kidney function. %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Köttgen, Anna %A Teumer, Alexander %A Garnaas, Maija %A Böger, Carsten A %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Olden, Matthias %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Tin, Adrienne %A Taliun, Daniel %A Li, Man %A Gao, Xiaoyi %A Gorski, Mathias %A Yang, Qiong %A Hundertmark, Claudia %A Foster, Meredith C %A O'Seaghdha, Conall M %A Glazer, Nicole %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Smith, Albert V %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Li, Guo %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Gierman, Hinco J %A Feitosa, Mary %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Atkinson, Elizabeth J %A Lohman, Kurt %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Johansson, Asa %A Tönjes, Anke %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Chouraki, Vincent %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Sorice, Rossella %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Esko, Tõnu %A Deshmukh, Harshal %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Murgia, Federico %A Trompet, Stella %A Imboden, Medea %A Kollerits, Barbara %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Schmidt, Helena %A Cavalieri, Margherita %A Rao, Madhumathi %A Hu, Frank B %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Oostra, Ben A %A de Andrade, Mariza %A Turner, Stephen T %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Andrews, Jeanette S %A Freedman, Barry I %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Illig, Thomas %A Döring, Angela %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Boban, Mladen %A Minelli, Cosetta %A Wheeler, Heather E %A Igl, Wilmar %A Zaboli, Ghazal %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wright, Alan F %A Campbell, Harry %A Ellinghaus, David %A Nöthlings, Ute %A Jacobs, Gunnar %A Biffar, Reiner %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Ernst, Florian %A Homuth, Georg %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Nauck, Matthias %A Stracke, Sylvia %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Kovacs, Peter %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Mägi, Reedik %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Polasek, Ozren %A Hastie, Nick %A Vitart, Veronique %A Helmer, Catherine %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Bergmann, Sven %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Nikopensius, Tiit %A Province, Michael %A Ketkar, Shamika %A Colhoun, Helen %A Doney, Alex %A Robino, Antonietta %A Giulianini, Franco %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Portas, Laura %A Ford, Ian %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Adam, Martin %A Thun, Gian-Andri %A Paulweber, Bernhard %A Haun, Margot %A Sala, Cinzia %A Metzger, Marie %A Mitchell, Paul %A Ciullo, Marina %A Kim, Stuart K %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Raitakari, Olli %A Metspalu, Andres %A Palmer, Colin %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Pirastu, Mario %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Coresh, Josef %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Siscovick, David S %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Liu, Yongmei %A Curhan, Gary C %A Rudan, Igor %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Wilson, James F %A Franke, Andre %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Rettig, Rainer %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Hayward, Caroline %A Ridker, Paul %A Parsa, Afshin %A Bochud, Murielle %A Heid, Iris M %A Goessling, Wolfram %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Kao, W H Linda %A Fox, Caroline S %K African Americans %K Aged %K Animals %K Caspase 9 %K Cyclin-Dependent Kinases %K DEAD-box RNA Helicases %K DNA Helicases %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Follow-Up Studies %K Gene Knockdown Techniques %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glomerular Filtration Rate %K Humans %K Kidney %K Kidney Failure, Chronic %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Phosphoric Diester Hydrolases %K Zebrafish %X

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is an important public health problem with a genetic component. We performed genome-wide association studies in up to 130,600 European ancestry participants overall, and stratified for key CKD risk factors. We uncovered 6 new loci in association with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), the primary clinical measure of CKD, in or near MPPED2, DDX1, SLC47A1, CDK12, CASP9, and INO80. Morpholino knockdown of mpped2 and casp9 in zebrafish embryos revealed podocyte and tubular abnormalities with altered dextran clearance, suggesting a role for these genes in renal function. By providing new insights into genes that regulate renal function, these results could further our understanding of the pathogenesis of CKD.

%B PLoS Genet %V 8 %P e1002584 %8 2012 %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22479191?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002584 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Respir Crit Care Med %D 2012 %T Genome-wide association studies identify CHRNA5/3 and HTR4 in the development of airflow obstruction. %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Shrine, Nick R G %A Loehr, Laura R %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Smolonska, Joanna %A Tang, Wenbo %A Loth, Daan W %A Curjuric, Ivan %A Hui, Jennie %A Cho, Michael H %A Latourelle, Jeanne C %A Henry, Amanda P %A Aldrich, Melinda %A Bakke, Per %A Beaty, Terri H %A Bentley, Amy R %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Chen, Ting-Hsu %A Couper, David %A Crapo, James D %A Davies, Gail %A Dupuis, Josée %A Franceschini, Nora %A Gulsvik, Amund %A Hancock, Dana B %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofman, Albert %A Imboden, Medea %A James, Alan L %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Lahousse, Lies %A Launer, Lenore J %A Litonjua, Augusto %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Lomas, David A %A Lumley, Thomas %A Marciante, Kristin D %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Meibohm, Bernd %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Musk, Arthur W %A Myers, Richard H %A North, Kari E %A Postma, Dirkje S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rochat, Thierry %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Starr, John M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Zanen, Pieter %A Province, Michael A %A Silverman, Edwin K %A Deary, Ian J %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Barr, R Graham %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Strachan, David P %A London, Stephanie J %A Boezen, H Marike %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole %A Gharib, Sina A %A Hall, Ian P %A O'Connor, George T %A Tobin, Martin D %A Stricker, Bruno H %K Aged %K Female %K Forced Expiratory Volume %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive %K Receptors, Nicotinic %K Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT4 %K Smoking %K Vital Capacity %X

RATIONALE: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified loci influencing lung function, but fewer genes influencing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are known.

OBJECTIVES: Perform meta-analyses of GWAS for airflow obstruction, a key pathophysiologic characteristic of COPD assessed by spirometry, in population-based cohorts examining all participants, ever smokers, never smokers, asthma-free participants, and more severe cases.

METHODS: Fifteen cohorts were studied for discovery (3,368 affected; 29,507 unaffected), and a population-based family study and a meta-analysis of case-control studies were used for replication and regional follow-up (3,837 cases; 4,479 control subjects). Airflow obstruction was defined as FEV(1) and its ratio to FVC (FEV(1)/FVC) both less than their respective lower limits of normal as determined by published reference equations.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The discovery meta-analyses identified one region on chromosome 15q25.1 meeting genome-wide significance in ever smokers that includes AGPHD1, IREB2, and CHRNA5/CHRNA3 genes. The region was also modestly associated among never smokers. Gene expression studies confirmed the presence of CHRNA5/3 in lung, airway smooth muscle, and bronchial epithelial cells. A single-nucleotide polymorphism in HTR4, a gene previously related to FEV(1)/FVC, achieved genome-wide statistical significance in combined meta-analysis. Top single-nucleotide polymorphisms in ADAM19, RARB, PPAP2B, and ADAMTS19 were nominally replicated in the COPD meta-analysis.

CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest an important role for the CHRNA5/3 region as a genetic risk factor for airflow obstruction that may be independent of smoking and implicate the HTR4 gene in the etiology of airflow obstruction.

%B Am J Respir Crit Care Med %V 186 %P 622-32 %8 2012 Oct 01 %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22837378?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1164/rccm.201202-0366OC %0 Journal Article %J Blood %D 2012 %T Genome-wide association study for circulating levels of PAI-1 provides novel insights into its regulation. %A Huang, Jie %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Tregouet, David %A Shin, So-Youn %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Baumert, Jens %A Oudot-Mellakh, Tiphaine %A Folkersen, Lasse %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Williams, Scott M %A Ikram, Mohammad A %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Becker, Diane M %A Truong, Vinh %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Tang, Weihong %A Yang, Qiong %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Moore, Jason H %A Williams, Frances M K %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Silbernagel, Günther %A Schrijvers, Elisabeth M C %A Smith, Shelly %A Karakas, Mahir %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Silveira, Angela %A Navis, Gerjan J %A Lohman, Kurt %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Peters, Annette %A Goel, Anuj %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Chambers, John C %A Saleheen, Danish %A Lundmark, Per %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Carter, Angela M %A Meisinger, Christa %A Peden, John F %A Bis, Joshua C %A McKnight, Barbara %A Ohrvik, John %A Taylor, Kent %A Franzosi, Maria Grazia %A Seedorf, Udo %A Collins, Rory %A Franco-Cereceda, Anders %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Goodall, Alison H %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Cushman, Mary %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Basu, Saonli %A Matijevic, Nena %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Hofman, Albert %A Danesh, John %A Clarke, Robert %A Meigs, James B %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Klopp, Norman %A Harris, Tamara B %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Grant, Peter J %A Hillege, Hans L %A Watkins, Hugh %A Spector, Timothy D %A Becker, Lewis C %A Tracy, Russell P %A März, Winfried %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Eriksson, Per %A Cambien, Francois %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Soranzo, Nicole %A van der Harst, Pim %A Liu, Yongmei %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Hamsten, Anders %K Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing %K ARNTL Transcription Factors %K ATPases Associated with Diverse Cellular Activities %K Cell Line %K Cell Line, Tumor %K Cohort Studies %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 %K Gene Expression Profiling %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Gene Frequency %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K LIM Domain Proteins %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Monocytes %K Mucin-3 %K Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1 %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K PPAR gamma %K Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex %K RNA Interference %K Transcription Factors %X

We conducted a genome-wide association study to identify novel associations between genetic variants and circulating plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) concentration, and examined functional implications of variants and genes that were discovered. A discovery meta-analysis was performed in 19 599 subjects, followed by replication analysis of genome-wide significant (P < 5 × 10(-8)) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 10 796 independent samples. We further examined associations with type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease, assessed the functional significance of the SNPs for gene expression in human tissues, and conducted RNA-silencing experiments for one novel association. We confirmed the association of the 4G/5G proxy SNP rs2227631 in the promoter region of SERPINE1 (7q22.1) and discovered genome-wide significant associations at 3 additional loci: chromosome 7q22.1 close to SERPINE1 (rs6976053, discovery P = 3.4 × 10(-10)); chromosome 11p15.2 within ARNTL (rs6486122, discovery P = 3.0 × 10(-8)); and chromosome 3p25.2 within PPARG (rs11128603, discovery P = 2.9 × 10(-8)). Replication was achieved for the 7q22.1 and 11p15.2 loci. There was nominal association with type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease at ARNTL (P < .05). Functional studies identified MUC3 as a candidate gene for the second association signal on 7q22.1. In summary, SNPs in SERPINE1 and ARNTL and an SNP associated with the expression of MUC3 were robustly associated with circulating levels of PAI-1.

%B Blood %V 120 %P 4873-81 %8 2012 Dec 06 %G eng %N 24 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22990020?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1182/blood-2012-06-436188 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2012 %T Genome-wide joint meta-analysis of SNP and SNP-by-smoking interaction identifies novel loci for pulmonary function. %A Hancock, Dana B %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Gharib, Sina A %A Henry, Amanda %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Ramasamy, Adaikalavan %A Loth, Daan W %A Imboden, Medea %A Koch, Beate %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Smith, Albert V %A Smolonska, Joanna %A Sood, Akshay %A Tang, Wenbo %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Zhai, Guangju %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Aschard, Hugues %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Curjuric, Ivan %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Elliott, Paul %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Harris, Tamara B %A Janson, Christer %A Homuth, Georg %A Hysi, Pirro G %A Liu, Jason Z %A Loehr, Laura R %A Lohman, Kurt %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Manning, Alisa K %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Obeidat, Ma'en %A Postma, Dirkje S %A Aldrich, Melinda C %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Chen, Ting-Hsu %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Franceschini, Nora %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Williams, O Dale %A Bentley, Amy R %A Hofman, Albert %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Lumley, Thomas %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Joubert, Bonnie R %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Couper, David J %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Wjst, Matthias %A Wain, Louise V %A Vonk, Judith M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rochat, Thierry %A Rich, Stephen S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A O'Connor, George T %A North, Kari E %A Mirel, Daniel B %A Meibohm, Bernd %A Launer, Lenore J %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hammond, Christopher J %A Gläser, Sven %A Marchini, Jonathan %A Kraft, Peter %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Völzke, Henry %A Stricker, Bruno H C %A Spector, Timothy D %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Jarvis, Deborah %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Boezen, H Marike %A Barr, R Graham %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Strachan, David P %A Fornage, Myriam %A Hall, Ian P %A Dupuis, Josée %A Tobin, Martin D %A London, Stephanie J %K Forced Expiratory Volume %K Gene Expression %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K HLA-DQ Antigens %K HLA-DQ beta-Chains %K Humans %K Lung %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying %K Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive %K Receptors, Cell Surface %K Smoking %K SOX9 Transcription Factor %K Vital Capacity %X

Genome-wide association studies have identified numerous genetic loci for spirometic measures of pulmonary function, forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV(1)), and its ratio to forced vital capacity (FEV(1)/FVC). Given that cigarette smoking adversely affects pulmonary function, we conducted genome-wide joint meta-analyses (JMA) of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and SNP-by-smoking (ever-smoking or pack-years) associations on FEV(1) and FEV(1)/FVC across 19 studies (total N = 50,047). We identified three novel loci not previously associated with pulmonary function. SNPs in or near DNER (smallest P(JMA = )5.00×10(-11)), HLA-DQB1 and HLA-DQA2 (smallest P(JMA = )4.35×10(-9)), and KCNJ2 and SOX9 (smallest P(JMA = )1.28×10(-8)) were associated with FEV(1)/FVC or FEV(1) in meta-analysis models including SNP main effects, smoking main effects, and SNP-by-smoking (ever-smoking or pack-years) interaction. The HLA region has been widely implicated for autoimmune and lung phenotypes, unlike the other novel loci, which have not been widely implicated. We evaluated DNER, KCNJ2, and SOX9 and found them to be expressed in human lung tissue. DNER and SOX9 further showed evidence of differential expression in human airway epithelium in smokers compared to non-smokers. Our findings demonstrated that joint testing of SNP and SNP-by-environment interaction identified novel loci associated with complex traits that are missed when considering only the genetic main effects.

%B PLoS Genet %V 8 %P e1003098 %8 2012 %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23284291?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003098 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2012 %T Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies 56 bone mineral density loci and reveals 14 loci associated with risk of fracture. %A Estrada, Karol %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Hsu, Yi-Hsiang %A Duncan, Emma L %A Ntzani, Evangelia E %A Oei, Ling %A Albagha, Omar M E %A Amin, Najaf %A Kemp, John P %A Koller, Daniel L %A Li, Guo %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Minster, Ryan L %A Moayyeri, Alireza %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Willner, Dana %A Xiao, Su-Mei %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Zheng, Hou-Feng %A Alonso, Nerea %A Eriksson, Joel %A Kammerer, Candace M %A Kaptoge, Stephen K %A Leo, Paul J %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Wilson, Scott G %A Wilson, James F %A Aalto, Ville %A Alen, Markku %A Aragaki, Aaron K %A Aspelund, Thor %A Center, Jacqueline R %A Dailiana, Zoe %A Duggan, David J %A Garcia, Melissa %A García-Giralt, Natalia %A Giroux, Sylvie %A Hallmans, Göran %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Husted, Lise Bjerre %A Jameson, Karen A %A Khusainova, Rita %A Kim, Ghi Su %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Koromila, Theodora %A Kruk, Marcin %A Laaksonen, Marika %A LaCroix, Andrea Z %A Lee, Seung Hun %A Leung, Ping C %A Lewis, Joshua R %A Masi, Laura %A Mencej-Bedrac, Simona %A Nguyen, Tuan V %A Nogues, Xavier %A Patel, Millan S %A Prezelj, Janez %A Rose, Lynda M %A Scollen, Serena %A Siggeirsdottir, Kristin %A Smith, Albert V %A Svensson, Olle %A Trompet, Stella %A Trummer, Olivia %A van Schoor, Natasja M %A Woo, Jean %A Zhu, Kun %A Balcells, Susana %A Brandi, Maria Luisa %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Cheng, Sulin %A Christiansen, Claus %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Dedoussis, George %A Ford, Ian %A Frost, Morten %A Goltzman, David %A González-Macías, Jesús %A Kähönen, Mika %A Karlsson, Magnus %A Khusnutdinova, Elza %A Koh, Jung-Min %A Kollia, Panagoula %A Langdahl, Bente Lomholt %A Leslie, William D %A Lips, Paul %A Ljunggren, Osten %A Lorenc, Roman S %A Marc, Janja %A Mellström, Dan %A Obermayer-Pietsch, Barbara %A Olmos, José M %A Pettersson-Kymmer, Ulrika %A Reid, David M %A Riancho, José A %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rousseau, François %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Tang, Nelson L S %A Urreizti, Roser %A Van Hul, Wim %A Viikari, Jorma %A Zarrabeitia, María T %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Castano-Betancourt, Martha %A Grundberg, Elin %A Herrera, Lizbeth %A Ingvarsson, Thorvaldur %A Johannsdottir, Hrefna %A Kwan, Tony %A Li, Rui %A Luben, Robert %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Palsson, Stefan Th %A Reppe, Sjur %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sigurdsson, Gunnar %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Verlaan, Dominique %A Williams, Frances M K %A Wood, Andrew R %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Gautvik, Kaare M %A Pastinen, Tomi %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A Cauley, Jane A %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Clark, Graeme R %A Cummings, Steven R %A Danoy, Patrick %A Dennison, Elaine M %A Eastell, Richard %A Eisman, John A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A Jones, Graeme %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A McCloskey, Eugene %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Nandakumar, Kannabiran %A Nicholson, Geoffrey C %A Oostra, Ben A %A Peacock, Munro %A Pols, Huibert A P %A Prince, Richard L %A Raitakari, Olli %A Reid, Ian R %A Robbins, John %A Sambrook, Philip N %A Sham, Pak Chung %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Tylavsky, Frances A %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wareham, Nick J %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Econs, Michael J %A Evans, David M %A Harris, Tamara B %A Kung, Annie Wai Chee %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Reeve, Jonathan %A Spector, Timothy D %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Karasik, David %A Richards, J Brent %A Brown, Matthew A %A Stefansson, Kari %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Ralston, Stuart H %A Ioannidis, John P A %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %K Bone Density %K Computational Biology %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Extracellular Matrix Proteins %K Female %K Femur Neck %K Fractures, Bone %K Gene Expression Profiling %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Glycoproteins %K Humans %K Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins %K Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-5 %K Lumbar Vertebrae %K Male %K Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins %K Osteoporosis %K Phosphoproteins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Risk Factors %K Spectrin %X

Bone mineral density (BMD) is the most widely used predictor of fracture risk. We performed the largest meta-analysis to date on lumbar spine and femoral neck BMD, including 17 genome-wide association studies and 32,961 individuals of European and east Asian ancestry. We tested the top BMD-associated markers for replication in 50,933 independent subjects and for association with risk of low-trauma fracture in 31,016 individuals with a history of fracture (cases) and 102,444 controls. We identified 56 loci (32 new) associated with BMD at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10(-8)). Several of these factors cluster within the RANK-RANKL-OPG, mesenchymal stem cell differentiation, endochondral ossification and Wnt signaling pathways. However, we also discovered loci that were localized to genes not known to have a role in bone biology. Fourteen BMD-associated loci were also associated with fracture risk (P < 5 × 10(-4), Bonferroni corrected), of which six reached P < 5 × 10(-8), including at 18p11.21 (FAM210A), 7q21.3 (SLC25A13), 11q13.2 (LRP5), 4q22.1 (MEPE), 2p16.2 (SPTBN1) and 10q21.1 (DKK1). These findings shed light on the genetic architecture and pathophysiological mechanisms underlying BMD variation and fracture susceptibility.

%B Nat Genet %V 44 %P 491-501 %8 2012 Apr 15 %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1038/ng.2249 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2012 %T Large-scale association analyses identify new loci influencing glycemic traits and provide insight into the underlying biological pathways. %A Scott, Robert A %A Lagou, Vasiliki %A Welch, Ryan P %A Wheeler, Eleanor %A Montasser, May E %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mägi, Reedik %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Rehnberg, Emil %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J %A Yengo, Loic %A Lecoeur, Cécile %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Sanna, Serena %A Sidore, Carlo %A Johnson, Paul C D %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Johnson, Toby %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Verweij, Niek %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Shah, Sonia %A Smith, Albert V %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Gieger, Christian %A Salo, Perttu %A Perola, Markus %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Evans, David M %A Pourcain, Beate St %A Wu, Ying %A Andrews, Jeanette S %A Hui, Jennie %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Zhao, Wei %A Horikoshi, Momoko %A Navarro, Pau %A Isaacs, Aaron %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Vitart, Veronique %A Hayward, Caroline %A Esko, Tõnu %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Fraser, Ross M %A Fall, Tove %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A Chen, Han %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Morris, Andrew P %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Robertson, Neil %A Rybin, Denis %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Willems, Sara M %A Chines, Peter S %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kang, Hyun Min %A Stringham, Heather M %A Song, Kijoung %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Peden, John F %A Goel, Anuj %A Hicks, Andrew A %A An, Ping %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Franco-Cereceda, Anders %A Folkersen, Lasse %A Marullo, Letizia %A Jansen, Hanneke %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Bruinenberg, Marcel %A Pankow, James S %A North, Kari E %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Edkins, Sarah %A Varga, Tibor V %A Hallmans, Göran %A Oksa, Heikki %A Antonella, Mulas %A Nagaraja, Ramaiah %A Trompet, Stella %A Ford, Ian %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Kong, Augustine %A Kumari, Meena %A Gigante, Bruna %A Herder, Christian %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Caulfield, Mark %A Antti, Jula %A Mangino, Massimo %A Small, Kerrin %A Miljkovic, Iva %A Liu, Yongmei %A Atalay, Mustafa %A Kiess, Wieland %A James, Alan L %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Doney, Alex S F %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Smit, Johannes H %A Campbell, Susan %A Polasek, Ozren %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Hercberg, Serge %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Bolton, Jennifer L %A Fowkes, Gerard R %A Kovacs, Peter %A Lindström, Jaana %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Wild, Sarah H %A Basart, Hanneke V %A Rathmann, Wolfgang %A Grallert, Harald %A Maerz, Winfried %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Peters, Annette %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Province, Michael A %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Rudan, Igor %A Campbell, Harry %A Watkins, Hugh %A Farrall, Martin %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Bergman, Richard N %A Collins, Francis S %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Watanabe, Richard M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Hofman, Albert %A Oostra, Ben A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wilson, James F %A Wright, Alan F %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Metspalu, Andres %A Uusitupa, Matti %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Kyvik, Kirsten O %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Price, Jackie F %A Dedoussis, George V %A Deloukas, Panos %A Meneton, Pierre %A Lind, Lars %A Boehnke, Michael %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Morris, Andrew D %A Toenjes, Anke %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Beilby, John P %A Körner, Antje %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Lakka, Timo A %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Adair, Linda S %A Smith, George Davey %A Spector, Tim D %A Illig, Thomas %A de Faire, Ulf %A Hamsten, Anders %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Keinanen-Kiukaanniemi, Sirkka M %A Saaristo, Timo E %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Stefansson, Kari %A van der Harst, Pim %A Dupuis, Josée %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Sattar, Naveed %A Harris, Tamara B %A Cucca, Francesco %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Balkau, Beverley %A Froguel, Philippe %A Pouta, Anneli %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Bouatia-Naji, Nabila %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Franks, Paul W %A Meigs, James B %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Florez, Jose C %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Barroso, Inês %K Adult %K Animals %K Blood Glucose %K Fasting %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Insulin %K Male %K Metabolic Networks and Pathways %K Mice %K Osmolar Concentration %K Quantitative Trait Loci %X

Through genome-wide association meta-analyses of up to 133,010 individuals of European ancestry without diabetes, including individuals newly genotyped using the Metabochip, we have increased the number of confirmed loci influencing glycemic traits to 53, of which 33 also increase type 2 diabetes risk (q < 0.05). Loci influencing fasting insulin concentration showed association with lipid levels and fat distribution, suggesting impact on insulin resistance. Gene-based analyses identified further biologically plausible loci, suggesting that additional loci beyond those reaching genome-wide significance are likely to represent real associations. This conclusion is supported by an excess of directionally consistent and nominally significant signals between discovery and follow-up studies. Functional analysis of these newly discovered loci will further improve our understanding of glycemic control.

%B Nat Genet %V 44 %P 991-1005 %8 2012 Sep %G eng %N 9 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22885924?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.2385 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2012 %T Meta-analyses identify 13 loci associated with age at menopause and highlight DNA repair and immune pathways. %A Stolk, Lisette %A Perry, John R B %A Chasman, Daniel I %A He, Chunyan %A Mangino, Massimo %A Sulem, Patrick %A Barbalic, Maja %A Broer, Linda %A Byrne, Enda M %A Ernst, Florian %A Esko, Tõnu %A Franceschini, Nora %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Kraft, Peter %A McArdle, Patrick F %A Porcu, Eleonora %A Shin, So-Youn %A Smith, Albert V %A van Wingerden, Sophie %A Zhai, Guangju %A Zhuang, Wei V %A Albrecht, Eva %A Alizadeh, Behrooz Z %A Aspelund, Thor %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Lauc, Lovorka Barac %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Boban, Mladen %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Broekmans, Frank J %A Burri, Andrea %A Campbell, Harry %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Chen, Constance %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Corre, Tanguy %A Coviello, Andrea D %A D'Adamo, Pio %A Davies, Gail %A de Faire, Ulf %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Deary, Ian J %A Dedoussis, George V Z %A Deloukas, Panagiotis %A Ebrahim, Shah %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Emilsson, Valur %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Fauser, Bart C J M %A Ferreli, Liana %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Fischer, Krista %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Glazer, Nicole %A Grobbee, Diederick E %A Hall, Per %A Haller, Toomas %A Hankinson, Susan E %A Hass, Merli %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heath, Andrew C %A Hofman, Albert %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Janssens, A Cecile J W %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Karasik, David %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Keyzer, Jules %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lahti, Jari %A Lai, Sandra %A Laisk, Triin %A Laven, Joop S E %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Liu, Jianjun %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Louwers, Yvonne V %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Marongiu, Mara %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Klaric, Irena Martinovic %A Masciullo, Corrado %A McKnight, Barbara %A Medland, Sarah E %A Melzer, David %A Mooser, Vincent %A Navarro, Pau %A Newman, Anne B %A Nyholt, Dale R %A Onland-Moret, N Charlotte %A Palotie, Aarno %A Paré, Guillaume %A Parker, Alex N %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peeters, Petra H M %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Plump, Andrew S %A Polasek, Ozren %A Pop, Victor J M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Rehnberg, Emil %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Sala, Cinzia %A Salumets, Andres %A Scuteri, Angelo %A Singleton, Andrew %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Stacey, Simon N %A Starr, John M %A Stathopoulou, Maria G %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Sun, Yan V %A Tenesa, Albert %A Thorand, Barbara %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Tryggvadottir, Laufey %A Tsui, Kim %A Ulivi, Sheila %A van Dam, Rob M %A van der Schouw, Yvonne T %A van Gils, Carla H %A van Nierop, Peter %A Vink, Jacqueline M %A Visscher, Peter M %A Voorhuis, Marlies %A Waeber, Gérard %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Wichmann, H Erich %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Wijnands-van Gent, Colette J M %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilson, James F %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Wright, Alan F %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Zgaga, Lina %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Zygmunt, Marek %A Arnold, Alice M %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Buring, Julie E %A Crisponi, Laura %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hu, Frank B %A Hunter, David J %A Launer, Lenore J %A Metspalu, Andres %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Oostra, Ben A %A Ridker, Paul M %A Sanna, Serena %A Schlessinger, David %A Spector, Tim D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Uda, Manuela %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Völzke, Henry %A Murray, Anna %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Visser, Jenny A %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %K Age Factors %K DNA Helicases %K DNA Polymerase gamma %K DNA Primase %K DNA Repair %K DNA Repair Enzymes %K DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Exodeoxyribonucleases %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Immunity %K Menopause %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proteins %X

To newly identify loci for age at natural menopause, we carried out a meta-analysis of 22 genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in 38,968 women of European descent, with replication in up to 14,435 women. In addition to four known loci, we identified 13 loci newly associated with age at natural menopause (at P < 5 × 10(-8)). Candidate genes located at these newly associated loci include genes implicated in DNA repair (EXO1, HELQ, UIMC1, FAM175A, FANCI, TLK1, POLG and PRIM1) and immune function (IL11, NLRP11 and PRRC2A (also known as BAT2)). Gene-set enrichment pathway analyses using the full GWAS data set identified exoDNase, NF-κB signaling and mitochondrial dysfunction as biological processes related to timing of menopause.

%B Nat Genet %V 44 %P 260-8 %8 2012 Jan 22 %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22267201?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.1051 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2012 %T Meta-analysis identifies six new susceptibility loci for atrial fibrillation. %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Albert, Christine M %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Ritchie, Marylyn D %A Smith, Albert V %A Arking, Dan E %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Bis, Joshua C %A Chung, Mina K %A Dörr, Marcus %A Ozaki, Kouichi %A Roberts, Jason D %A Smith, J Gustav %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Lohman, Kurt %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Rienstra, Michiel %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Magnani, Jared W %A Wakili, Reza %A Clauss, Sebastian %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Steinbeck, Gerhard %A Launer, Lenore J %A Davies, Robert W %A Borkovich, Matthew %A Harris, Tamara B %A Lin, Honghuang %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Milan, David J %A Hofman, Albert %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Chen, Lin Y %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Li, Guo %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Tedrow, Usha B %A Rose, Lynda M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Conen, David %A Tsunoda, Tatsuhiko %A Furukawa, Tetsushi %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Xu, Siyan %A Kamatani, Naoyuki %A Levy, Daniel %A Nakamura, Yusuke %A Parvez, Babar %A Mahida, Saagar %A Furie, Karen L %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Muhammad, Raafia %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Perz, Siegfried %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Kao, W H Linda %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Roden, Dan M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A McKnight, Barbara %A Sjögren, Marketa %A Newman, Anne B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Gollob, Michael H %A Melander, Olle %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Felix, Stephan B %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Darbar, Dawood %A Barnard, John %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kääb, Stefan %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Child %K Child, Preschool %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Infant %K Infant, Newborn %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %K Young Adult %X

Atrial fibrillation is a highly prevalent arrhythmia and a major risk factor for stroke, heart failure and death. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in individuals of European ancestry, including 6,707 with and 52,426 without atrial fibrillation. Six new atrial fibrillation susceptibility loci were identified and replicated in an additional sample of individuals of European ancestry, including 5,381 subjects with and 10,030 subjects without atrial fibrillation (P < 5 × 10(-8)). Four of the loci identified in Europeans were further replicated in silico in a GWAS of Japanese individuals, including 843 individuals with and 3,350 individuals without atrial fibrillation. The identified loci implicate candidate genes that encode transcription factors related to cardiopulmonary development, cardiac-expressed ion channels and cell signaling molecules.

%B Nat Genet %V 44 %P 670-5 %8 2012 Apr 29 %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22544366?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.2261 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2012 %T Novel loci for adiponectin levels and their influence on type 2 diabetes and metabolic traits: a multi-ethnic meta-analysis of 45,891 individuals. %A Dastani, Zari %A Hivert, Marie-France %A Timpson, Nicholas %A Perry, John R B %A Yuan, Xin %A Scott, Robert A %A Henneman, Peter %A Heid, Iris M %A Kizer, Jorge R %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Morris, Andrew P %A Small, Kerrin %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Beekman, Marian %A Coassin, Stefan %A Lohman, Kurt %A Qi, Lu %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Pankow, James S %A Uh, Hae-Won %A Wu, Ying %A Bidulescu, Aurelian %A Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J %A Greenwood, Celia M T %A Ladouceur, Martin %A Grimsby, Jonna %A Manning, Alisa K %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Kooner, Jaspal %A Mooser, Vincent E %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Kapur, Karen A %A Chambers, John %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Frants, Rune %A Willems-Vandijk, Ko %A Oostra, Ben A %A Willems, Sara M %A Lamina, Claudia %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tracy, Russell P %A Brody, Jennifer %A Chen, Ida %A Viikari, Jorma %A Kähönen, Mika %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Evans, David M %A St Pourcain, Beate %A Sattar, Naveed %A Wood, Andrew R %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Carlson, Olga D %A Egan, Josephine M %A Böhringer, Stefan %A van Heemst, Diana %A Kedenko, Lyudmyla %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Nuotio, Marja-Liisa %A Loo, Britt-Marie %A Harris, Tamara %A Garcia, Melissa %A Kanaya, Alka %A Haun, Margot %A Klopp, Norman %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Deloukas, Panos %A Katsareli, Efi %A Couper, David J %A Duncan, Bruce B %A Kloppenburg, Margreet %A Adair, Linda S %A Borja, Judith B %A Wilson, James G %A Musani, Solomon %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Johnson, Toby %A Semple, Robert %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Allison, Matthew A %A Redline, Susan %A Buxbaum, Sarah G %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Meulenbelt, Ingrid %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Dedoussis, George V %A Hu, Frank B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Paulweber, Bernhard %A Spector, Timothy D %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Jula, Antti %A Perola, Markus %A Raitakari, Olli %A Florez, Jose C %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Smith, George Davey %A Siscovick, David S %A Kronenberg, Florian %A van Duijn, Cornelia %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Meigs, James B %A Dupuis, Josée %A Richards, J Brent %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Scott, Laura J %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Dina, Christian %A Welch, Ryan P %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Huth, Cornelia %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A McCulloch, Laura J %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Grallert, Harald %A Amin, Najaf %A Wu, Guanming %A Willer, Cristen J %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A McCarroll, Steve A %A Hofmann, Oliver M %A Segrè, Ayellet V %A van Hoek, Mandy %A Navarro, Pau %A Ardlie, Kristin %A Balkau, Beverley %A Benediktsson, Rafn %A Bennett, Amanda J %A Blagieva, Roza %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Boström, Kristina Bengtsson %A Bravenboer, Bert %A Bumpstead, Suzannah %A Burtt, Noel P %A Charpentier, Guillaume %A Chines, Peter S %A Cornelis, Marilyn %A Crawford, Gabe %A Doney, Alex S F %A Elliott, Katherine S %A Elliott, Amanda L %A Erdos, Michael R %A Fox, Caroline S %A Franklin, Christopher S %A Ganser, Martha %A Gieger, Christian %A Grarup, Niels %A Green, Todd %A Griffin, Simon %A Groves, Christopher J %A Guiducci, Candace %A Hadjadj, Samy %A Hassanali, Neelam %A Herder, Christian %A Isomaa, Bo %A Jackson, Anne U %A Johnson, Paul R V %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Kao, Wen H L %A Kong, Augustine %A Kraft, Peter %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Lauritzen, Torsten %A Li, Man %A Lieverse, Aloysius %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Lyssenko, Valeriya %A Marre, Michel %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Midthjell, Kristian %A Morken, Mario A %A Narisu, Narisu %A Nilsson, Peter %A Owen, Katharine R %A Payne, Felicity %A Petersen, Ann-Kristin %A Platou, Carl %A Proença, Christine %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Rathmann, Wolfgang %A Rayner, N William %A Robertson, Neil R %A Rocheleau, Ghislain %A Roden, Michael %A Sampson, Michael J %A Saxena, Richa %A Shields, Beverley M %A Shrader, Peter %A Sigurdsson, Gunnar %A Sparsø, Thomas %A Strassburger, Klaus %A Stringham, Heather M %A Sun, Qi %A Swift, Amy J %A Thorand, Barbara %A Tichet, Jean %A Tuomi, Tiinamaija %A van Dam, Rob M %A van Haeften, Timon W %A van Herpt, Thijs %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Walters, G Bragi %A Weedon, Michael N %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Witteman, Jacqueline %A Bergman, Richard N %A Cauchi, Stephane %A Collins, Francis S %A Gloyn, Anna L %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hansen, Torben %A Hide, Winston A %A Hitman, Graham A %A Hofman, Albert %A Hunter, David J %A Hveem, Kristian %A Laakso, Markku %A Morris, Andrew D %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Rudan, Igor %A Sijbrands, Eric %A Stein, Lincoln D %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uitterlinden, Andre %A Walker, Mark %A Watanabe, Richard M %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Campbell, Harry %A Daly, Mark J %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Barroso, Inês %A Groop, Leif %A Sladek, Rob %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Wilson, James F %A Illig, Thomas %A Froguel, Philippe %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Stefansson, Kari %A Altshuler, David %A Boehnke, Michael %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Wheeler, Eleanor %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Bouatia-Naji, Nabila %A Mägi, Reedik %A Randall, Joshua %A Elliott, Paul %A Rybin, Denis %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Hottenga, Jouke Jan %A Song, Kijoung %A Goel, Anuj %A Lajunen, Taina %A Doney, Alex %A Cavalcanti-Proença, Christine %A Kumari, Meena %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Zabena, Carina %A Ingelsson, Erik %A An, Ping %A O'Connell, Jeffrey %A Luan, Jian'an %A Elliott, Amanda %A McCarroll, Steven A %A Roccasecca, Rosa Maria %A Pattou, François %A Sethupathy, Praveen %A Ariyurek, Yavuz %A Barter, Philip %A Beilby, John P %A Ben-Shlomo, Yoav %A Bergmann, Sven %A Bochud, Murielle %A Bonnefond, Amélie %A Borch-Johnsen, Knut %A Böttcher, Yvonne %A Brunner, Eric %A Bumpstead, Suzannah J %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Chines, Peter %A Clarke, Robert %A Coin, Lachlan J M %A Cooper, Matthew N %A Crisponi, Laura %A Day, Ian N M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Delplanque, Jerome %A Fedson, Annette C %A Fischer-Rosinsky, Antje %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Franzosi, Maria Grazia %A Galan, Pilar %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Graessler, Jürgen %A Grundy, Scott %A Gwilliam, Rhian %A Hallmans, Göran %A Hammond, Naomi %A Han, Xijing %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heath, Simon C %A Hercberg, Serge %A Hillman, David R %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Hui, Jennie %A Hung, Joe %A Kaakinen, Marika %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kesaniemi, Y Antero %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Knight, Beatrice %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Kovacs, Peter %A Kyvik, Kirsten Ohm %A Lathrop, G Mark %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Le Bacquer, Olivier %A Lecoeur, Cécile %A Li, Yun %A Mahley, Robert %A Mangino, Massimo %A Martínez-Larrad, María Teresa %A McAteer, Jarred B %A McPherson, Ruth %A Meisinger, Christa %A Melzer, David %A Meyre, David %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Mukherjee, Sutapa %A Naitza, Silvia %A Neville, Matthew J %A Orrù, Marco %A Pakyz, Ruth %A Paolisso, Giuseppe %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Pearson, Daniel %A Peden, John F %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Pfeiffer, Andreas F H %A Pichler, Irene %A Polasek, Ozren %A Posthuma, Danielle %A Potter, Simon C %A Pouta, Anneli %A Province, Michael A %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Rice, Kenneth %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rolandsson, Olov %A Sandbaek, Annelli %A Sandhu, Manjinder %A Sanna, Serena %A Sayer, Avan Aihie %A Scheet, Paul %A Seedorf, Udo %A Sharp, Stephen J %A Shields, Beverley %A Sigurðsson, Gunnar %A Sijbrands, Eric J G %A Silveira, Angela %A Simpson, Laila %A Singleton, Andrew %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Sovio, Ulla %A Swift, Amy %A Syddall, Holly %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Tönjes, Anke %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Dijk, Ko Willems %A Varma, Dhiraj %A Visvikis-Siest, Sophie %A Vitart, Veronique %A Vogelzangs, Nicole %A Waeber, Gérard %A Wagner, Peter J %A Walley, Andrew %A Ward, Kim L %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Witteman, Jaqueline C M %A Yarnell, John W G %A Zelenika, Diana %A Zethelius, Björn %A Zhai, Guangju %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Meneton, Pierre %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Nathan, David M %A Williams, Gordon H %A Silander, Kaisa %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Schwarz, Peter %A Spranger, Joachim %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Serrano-Ríos, Manuel %A Lind, Lars %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Hu, Frank B %A Franks, Paul W %A Ebrahim, Shah %A Marmot, Michael %A Kao, W H Linda %A Pramstaller, Peter Paul %A Wright, Alan F %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Hamsten, Anders %A Buchanan, Thomas A %A Valle, Timo T %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Cao, Antonio %A Scuteri, Angelo %A Schlessinger, David %A Uda, Manuela %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Peltonen, Leena %A Mooser, Vincent %A Sladek, Robert %A Musunuru, Kiran %A Smith, Albert V %A Edmondson, Andrew C %A Stylianou, Ioannis M %A Koseki, Masahiro %A Pirruccello, James P %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Johansen, Christopher T %A Fouchier, Sigrid W %A Peloso, Gina M %A Barbalic, Maja %A Ricketts, Sally L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Melander, Olle %A Li, Xiaohui %A Li, Mingyao %A Cho, Yoon Shin %A Go, Min Jin %A Kim, Young Jin %A Lee, Jong-Young %A Park, Taesung %A Kim, Kyunga %A Sim, Xueling %A Ong, Rick Twee-Hee %A Croteau-Chonka, Damien C %A Lange, Leslie A %A Smith, Joshua D %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zee, Robert Y L %A Whitfield, John B %A Thompson, John R %A Surakka, Ida %A Spector, Tim D %A Smit, Johannes H %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Scott, James %A Saharinen, Juha %A Sabatti, Chiara %A Rose, Lynda M %A Roberts, Robert %A Rieder, Mark %A Parker, Alex N %A Paré, Guillaume %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Nieminen, Markku S %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Montgomery, Grant W %A McArdle, Wendy %A Masson, David %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Marroni, Fabio %A Lucas, Gavin %A Luben, Robert %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Lettre, Guillaume %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Laaksonen, Reijo %A Kyvik, Kirsten O %A König, Inke R %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kaplan, Lee M %A Johansson, Asa %A Janssens, A Cecile J W %A Igl, Wilmar %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Harris, Tamara B %A Haritunians, Talin %A Hall, Alistair S %A Groop, Leif C %A Gonzalez, Elena %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Ejebe, Kenechi G %A Döring, Angela %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Deloukas, Panagiotis %A de Faire, Ulf %A Crawford, Gabriel %A Chen, Yii-der I %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Boekholdt, S Matthijs %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Seielstad, Mark %A Wong, Tien Y %A Tai, E-Shyong %A Feranil, Alan B %A Kuzawa, Christopher W %A Taylor, Herman A %A Gabriel, Stacey B %A Holm, Hilma %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Tall, Alan R %A Hegele, Robert A %A Kastelein, John J P %A Schadt, Eric E %A Strachan, David P %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Sandhu, Manjinder S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rader, Daniel J %A Kathiresan, Sekar %K Adiponectin %K African Americans %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Gene Expression %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glucose Tolerance Test %K Humans %K Insulin Resistance %K Male %K Metabolic Networks and Pathways %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Waist-Hip Ratio %X

Circulating levels of adiponectin, a hormone produced predominantly by adipocytes, are highly heritable and are inversely associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) and other metabolic traits. We conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in 39,883 individuals of European ancestry to identify genes associated with metabolic disease. We identified 8 novel loci associated with adiponectin levels and confirmed 2 previously reported loci (P = 4.5×10(-8)-1.2×10(-43)). Using a novel method to combine data across ethnicities (N = 4,232 African Americans, N = 1,776 Asians, and N = 29,347 Europeans), we identified two additional novel loci. Expression analyses of 436 human adipocyte samples revealed that mRNA levels of 18 genes at candidate regions were associated with adiponectin concentrations after accounting for multiple testing (p<3×10(-4)). We next developed a multi-SNP genotypic risk score to test the association of adiponectin decreasing risk alleles on metabolic traits and diseases using consortia-level meta-analytic data. This risk score was associated with increased risk of T2D (p = 4.3×10(-3), n = 22,044), increased triglycerides (p = 2.6×10(-14), n = 93,440), increased waist-to-hip ratio (p = 1.8×10(-5), n = 77,167), increased glucose two hours post oral glucose tolerance testing (p = 4.4×10(-3), n = 15,234), increased fasting insulin (p = 0.015, n = 48,238), but with lower in HDL-cholesterol concentrations (p = 4.5×10(-13), n = 96,748) and decreased BMI (p = 1.4×10(-4), n = 121,335). These findings identify novel genetic determinants of adiponectin levels, which, taken together, influence risk of T2D and markers of insulin resistance.

%B PLoS Genet %V 8 %P e1002607 %8 2012 %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22479202?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002607 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Clin Nutr %D 2013 %T Common genetic loci influencing plasma homocysteine concentrations and their effect on risk of coronary artery disease. %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Paré, Guillaume %A Schwartz, Stephen M %A Hazra, Aditi %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Cotlarciuc, Ioana %A Yuan, Xin %A Mälarstig, Anders %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bis, Joshua C %A Blom, Henk %A Brown, Morris J %A Chen, Constance %A Chen, Yii-Der %A Clarke, Robert J %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Hamsten, Anders %A Hofman, Albert %A Hunter, David J %A Goel, Anuj %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Kampman, Ellen %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A L M %A Chambers, John C %A Kraft, Peter %A Lindemans, Jan %A McKnight, Barbara %A Nelson, Christopher P %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rose, Lynda M %A Seedorf, Udo %A Siscovick, David S %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Selhub, Jacob %A Ueland, Per M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Watkins, Hugh %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A den Heijer, Martin %A Jacques, Paul %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Rader, Dan J %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Mooser, Vincent %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Ahmadi, Kourosh R %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Genes %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genotype %K Homocysteine %K Humans %K Polymorphism, Genetic %K Risk Factors %X

BACKGROUND: The strong observational association between total homocysteine (tHcy) concentrations and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) and the null associations in the homocysteine-lowering trials have prompted the need to identify genetic variants associated with homocysteine concentrations and risk of CAD.

OBJECTIVE: We tested whether common genetic polymorphisms associated with variation in tHcy are also associated with CAD.

DESIGN: We conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on tHcy concentrations in 44,147 individuals of European descent. Polymorphisms associated with tHcy (P < 10(⁻⁸) were tested for association with CAD in 31,400 cases and 92,927 controls.

RESULTS: Common variants at 13 loci, explaining 5.9% of the variation in tHcy, were associated with tHcy concentrations, including 6 novel loci in or near MMACHC (2.1 × 10⁻⁹), SLC17A3 (1.0 × 10⁻⁸), GTPB10 (1.7 × 10⁻⁸), CUBN (7.5 × 10⁻¹⁰), HNF1A (1.2 × 10⁻¹²)), and FUT2 (6.6 × 10⁻⁹), and variants previously reported at or near the MTHFR, MTR, CPS1, MUT, NOX4, DPEP1, and CBS genes. Individuals within the highest 10% of the genotype risk score (GRS) had 3-μmol/L higher mean tHcy concentrations than did those within the lowest 10% of the GRS (P = 1 × 10⁻³⁶). The GRS was not associated with risk of CAD (OR: 1.01; 95% CI: 0.98, 1.04; P = 0.49).

CONCLUSIONS: We identified several novel loci that influence plasma tHcy concentrations. Overall, common genetic variants that influence plasma tHcy concentrations are not associated with risk of CAD in white populations, which further refutes the causal relevance of moderately elevated tHcy concentrations and tHcy-related pathways for CAD.

%B Am J Clin Nutr %V 98 %P 668-76 %8 2013 Sep %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23824729?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3945/ajcn.112.044545 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2013 %T Common variants associated with plasma triglycerides and risk for coronary artery disease. %A Do, Ron %A Willer, Cristen J %A Schmidt, Ellen M %A Sengupta, Sebanti %A Gao, Chi %A Peloso, Gina M %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Ganna, Andrea %A Chen, Jin %A Buchkovich, Martin L %A Mora, Samia %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Chang, Hsing-Yi %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Den Hertog, Heleen M %A Donnelly, Louise A %A Ehret, Georg B %A Esko, Tõnu %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Fischer, Krista %A Fontanillas, Pierre %A Fraser, Ross M %A Freitag, Daniel F %A Gurdasani, Deepti %A Heikkilä, Kauko %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Jackson, Anne U %A Johansson, Asa %A Johnson, Toby %A Kaakinen, Marika %A Kettunen, Johannes %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Li, Xiaohui %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Mangino, Massimo %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Montasser, May E %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nolte, Ilja M %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Palmer, Cameron D %A Perola, Markus %A Petersen, Ann-Kristin %A Sanna, Serena %A Saxena, Richa %A Service, Susan K %A Shah, Sonia %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Sidore, Carlo %A Song, Ci %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Surakka, Ida %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A van den Herik, Evita G %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Volcik, Kelly A %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Wong, Andrew %A Wu, Ying %A Zhang, Weihua %A Absher, Devin %A Asiki, Gershim %A Barroso, Inês %A Been, Latonya F %A Bolton, Jennifer L %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Brambilla, Paolo %A Burnett, Mary S %A Cesana, Giancarlo %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Doney, Alex S F %A Döring, Angela %A Elliott, Paul %A Epstein, Stephen E %A Eyjolfsson, Gudmundur Ingi %A Gigante, Bruna %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Grallert, Harald %A Gravito, Martha L %A Groves, Christopher J %A Hallmans, Göran %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hernandez, Dena %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Holm, Hilma %A Hung, Yi-Jen %A Illig, Thomas %A Jones, Michelle R %A Kaleebu, Pontiano %A Kastelein, John J P %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kim, Eric %A Klopp, Norman %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kumari, Meena %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lin, Shih-Yi %A Lindström, Jaana %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Mach, François %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Meisinger, Christa %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Müller, Gabrielle %A Nagaraja, Ramaiah %A Narisu, Narisu %A Nieminen, Tuomo V M %A Nsubuga, Rebecca N %A Olafsson, Isleifur %A Ong, Ken K %A Palotie, Aarno %A Papamarkou, Theodore %A Pomilla, Cristina %A Pouta, Anneli %A Rader, Daniel J %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rudan, Igor %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Samani, Nilesh %A Scharnagl, Hubert %A Seeley, Janet %A Silander, Kaisa %A Stančáková, Alena %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Swift, Amy J %A Tiret, Laurence %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Pelt, L Joost %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Wainwright, Nicholas %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilsgaard, Tom %A Wilson, James F %A Young, Elizabeth H %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Adair, Linda S %A Arveiler, Dominique %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bennett, Franklyn %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Bovet, Pascal %A Burnier, Michel %A Campbell, Harry %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chambers, John C %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Collins, Francis S %A Cooper, Richard S %A Danesh, John %A Dedoussis, George %A de Faire, Ulf %A Feranil, Alan B %A Ferrieres, Jean %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Gieger, Christian %A Groop, Leif C %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Hofman, Albert %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Hsiung, Chao Agnes %A Humphries, Steve E %A Hunt, Steven C %A Hveem, Kristian %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kesäniemi, Antero %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Kuh, Diana %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Kyvik, Kirsten O %A Laakso, Markku %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Martin, Nicholas G %A März, Winfried %A McCarthy, Mark I %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meneton, Pierre %A Metspalu, Andres %A Moilanen, Leena %A Morris, Andrew D %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Njølstad, Inger %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Power, Chris %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Price, Jackie F %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Saleheen, Danish %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sanghera, Dharambir K %A Saramies, Jouko %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Siegbahn, Agneta %A Spector, Tim D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Strachan, David P %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Tremoli, Elena %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uusitupa, Matti %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wallentin, Lars %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Whitfield, John B %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Altshuler, David %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Franks, Paul W %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Sandhu, Manjinder S %A Rich, Stephen S %A Boehnke, Michael %A Deloukas, Panos %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Daly, Mark J %A Neale, Benjamin M %A Kathiresan, Sekar %K Biological Transport %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Humans %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %K Triglycerides %X

Triglycerides are transported in plasma by specific triglyceride-rich lipoproteins; in epidemiological studies, increased triglyceride levels correlate with higher risk for coronary artery disease (CAD). However, it is unclear whether this association reflects causal processes. We used 185 common variants recently mapped for plasma lipids (P < 5 × 10(-8) for each) to examine the role of triglycerides in risk for CAD. First, we highlight loci associated with both low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and triglyceride levels, and we show that the direction and magnitude of the associations with both traits are factors in determining CAD risk. Second, we consider loci with only a strong association with triglycerides and show that these loci are also associated with CAD. Finally, in a model accounting for effects on LDL-C and/or high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels, the strength of a polymorphism's effect on triglyceride levels is correlated with the magnitude of its effect on CAD risk. These results suggest that triglyceride-rich lipoproteins causally influence risk for CAD.

%B Nat Genet %V 45 %P 1345-52 %8 2013 Nov %G eng %N 11 %R 10.1038/ng.2795 %0 Journal Article %J J Am Soc Nephrol %D 2013 %T Common variants in Mendelian kidney disease genes and their association with renal function. %A Parsa, Afshin %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Köttgen, Anna %A O'Seaghdha, Conall M %A Pattaro, Cristian %A de Andrade, Mariza %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Teumer, Alexander %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Olden, Matthias %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Tin, Adrienne %A Kim, Young J %A Taliun, Daniel %A Li, Man %A Feitosa, Mary %A Gorski, Mathias %A Yang, Qiong %A Hundertmark, Claudia %A Foster, Meredith C %A Glazer, Nicole %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Rao, Madhumathi %A Smith, Albert V %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Li, Guo %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Atkinson, Elizabeth J %A Lohman, Kurt %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Johansson, Asa %A Tönjes, Anke %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Couraki, Vincent %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Sorice, Rossella %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Esko, Tõnu %A Deshmukh, Harshal %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Murgia, Federico %A Trompet, Stella %A Imboden, Medea %A Kollerits, Barbara %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Schmidt, Helena %A Hofer, Edith %A Hu, Frank %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Oostra, Ben A %A Turner, Stephen T %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Andrews, Jeanette S %A Freedman, Barry I %A Giulianini, Franco %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Illig, Thomas %A Döring, Angela %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Zgaga, Lina %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Boban, Mladen %A Minelli, Cosetta %A Wheeler, Heather E %A Igl, Wilmar %A Zaboli, Ghazal %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wright, Alan F %A Campbell, Harry %A Ellinghaus, David %A Nöthlings, Ute %A Jacobs, Gunnar %A Biffar, Reiner %A Ernst, Florian %A Homuth, Georg %A Kroemer, Heyo K %A Nauck, Matthias %A Stracke, Sylvia %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Kovacs, Peter %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Mägi, Reedik %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Polasek, Ozren %A Hastie, Nick %A Vitart, Veronique %A Helmer, Catherine %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Stengel, Bénédicte %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Bergmann, Sven %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Nikopensius, Tiit %A Province, Michael %A Colhoun, Helen %A Doney, Alex %A Robino, Antonietta %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Portas, Laura %A Ford, Ian %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Adam, Martin %A Thun, Gian-Andri %A Paulweber, Bernhard %A Haun, Margot %A Sala, Cinzia %A Mitchell, Paul %A Ciullo, Marina %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Raitakari, Olli %A Metspalu, Andres %A Palmer, Colin %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Pirastu, Mario %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Coresh, Josef %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Liu, Yongmei %A Curhan, Gary C %A Rudan, Igor %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Wilson, James F %A Franke, Andre %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Rettig, Rainer %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Witteman, Jacqueline %A Hayward, Caroline %A Ridker, Paul M %A Bochud, Murielle %A Heid, Iris M %A Siscovick, David S %A Fox, Caroline S %A Kao, W Linda %A Böger, Carsten A %K Databases, Genetic %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Kidney %K Mendelian Randomization Analysis %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Renal Insufficiency, Chronic %X

Many common genetic variants identified by genome-wide association studies for complex traits map to genes previously linked to rare inherited Mendelian disorders. A systematic analysis of common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes responsible for Mendelian diseases with kidney phenotypes has not been performed. We thus developed a comprehensive database of genes for Mendelian kidney conditions and evaluated the association between common genetic variants within these genes and kidney function in the general population. Using the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database, we identified 731 unique disease entries related to specific renal search terms and confirmed a kidney phenotype in 218 of these entries, corresponding to mutations in 258 genes. We interrogated common SNPs (minor allele frequency >5%) within these genes for association with the estimated GFR in 74,354 European-ancestry participants from the CKDGen Consortium. However, the top four candidate SNPs (rs6433115 at LRP2, rs1050700 at TSC1, rs249942 at PALB2, and rs9827843 at ROBO2) did not achieve significance in a stage 2 meta-analysis performed in 56,246 additional independent individuals, indicating that these common SNPs are not associated with estimated GFR. The effect of less common or rare variants in these genes on kidney function in the general population and disease-specific cohorts requires further research.

%B J Am Soc Nephrol %V 24 %P 2105-17 %8 2013 Dec %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24029420?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1681/ASN.2012100983 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2013 %T Discovery and refinement of loci associated with lipid levels. %A Willer, Cristen J %A Schmidt, Ellen M %A Sengupta, Sebanti %A Peloso, Gina M %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Ganna, Andrea %A Chen, Jin %A Buchkovich, Martin L %A Mora, Samia %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Chang, Hsing-Yi %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Den Hertog, Heleen M %A Do, Ron %A Donnelly, Louise A %A Ehret, Georg B %A Esko, Tõnu %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Fischer, Krista %A Fontanillas, Pierre %A Fraser, Ross M %A Freitag, Daniel F %A Gurdasani, Deepti %A Heikkilä, Kauko %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Jackson, Anne U %A Johansson, Asa %A Johnson, Toby %A Kaakinen, Marika %A Kettunen, Johannes %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Li, Xiaohui %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Mangino, Massimo %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Montasser, May E %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nolte, Ilja M %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Palmer, Cameron D %A Perola, Markus %A Petersen, Ann-Kristin %A Sanna, Serena %A Saxena, Richa %A Service, Susan K %A Shah, Sonia %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Sidore, Carlo %A Song, Ci %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Surakka, Ida %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A van den Herik, Evita G %A Voight, Benjamin F %A Volcik, Kelly A %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Wong, Andrew %A Wu, Ying %A Zhang, Weihua %A Absher, Devin %A Asiki, Gershim %A Barroso, Inês %A Been, Latonya F %A Bolton, Jennifer L %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Brambilla, Paolo %A Burnett, Mary S %A Cesana, Giancarlo %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Doney, Alex S F %A Döring, Angela %A Elliott, Paul %A Epstein, Stephen E %A Ingi Eyjolfsson, Gudmundur %A Gigante, Bruna %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Grallert, Harald %A Gravito, Martha L %A Groves, Christopher J %A Hallmans, Göran %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hernandez, Dena %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Holm, Hilma %A Hung, Yi-Jen %A Illig, Thomas %A Jones, Michelle R %A Kaleebu, Pontiano %A Kastelein, John J P %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kim, Eric %A Klopp, Norman %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kumari, Meena %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lin, Shih-Yi %A Lindström, Jaana %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Mach, François %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Meisinger, Christa %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Müller, Gabrielle %A Nagaraja, Ramaiah %A Narisu, Narisu %A Nieminen, Tuomo V M %A Nsubuga, Rebecca N %A Olafsson, Isleifur %A Ong, Ken K %A Palotie, Aarno %A Papamarkou, Theodore %A Pomilla, Cristina %A Pouta, Anneli %A Rader, Daniel J %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rudan, Igor %A Ruokonen, Aimo %A Samani, Nilesh %A Scharnagl, Hubert %A Seeley, Janet %A Silander, Kaisa %A Stančáková, Alena %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Swift, Amy J %A Tiret, Laurence %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Pelt, L Joost %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Wainwright, Nicholas %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilsgaard, Tom %A Wilson, James F %A Young, Elizabeth H %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Adair, Linda S %A Arveiler, Dominique %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bennett, Franklyn %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Bovet, Pascal %A Burnier, Michel %A Campbell, Harry %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chambers, John C %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Collins, Francis S %A Cooper, Richard S %A Danesh, John %A Dedoussis, George %A de Faire, Ulf %A Feranil, Alan B %A Ferrieres, Jean %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Freimer, Nelson B %A Gieger, Christian %A Groop, Leif C %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Hofman, Albert %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Hsiung, Chao Agnes %A Humphries, Steve E %A Hunt, Steven C %A Hveem, Kristian %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kesäniemi, Antero %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Kuh, Diana %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Kyvik, Kirsten O %A Laakso, Markku %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Martin, Nicholas G %A März, Winfried %A McCarthy, Mark I %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meneton, Pierre %A Metspalu, Andres %A Moilanen, Leena %A Morris, Andrew D %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Njølstad, Inger %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Power, Chris %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Price, Jackie F %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Saleheen, Danish %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sanghera, Dharambir K %A Saramies, Jouko %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Siegbahn, Agneta %A Spector, Tim D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Strachan, David P %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Tremoli, Elena %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uusitupa, Matti %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wallentin, Lars %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Whitfield, John B %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Franks, Paul W %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Sandhu, Manjinder S %A Rich, Stephen S %A Boehnke, Michael %A Deloukas, Panos %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Coronary Artery Disease %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Lipids %K Triglycerides %X

Levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides and total cholesterol are heritable, modifiable risk factors for coronary artery disease. To identify new loci and refine known loci influencing these lipids, we examined 188,577 individuals using genome-wide and custom genotyping arrays. We identify and annotate 157 loci associated with lipid levels at P < 5 × 10(-8), including 62 loci not previously associated with lipid levels in humans. Using dense genotyping in individuals of European, East Asian, South Asian and African ancestry, we narrow association signals in 12 loci. We find that loci associated with blood lipid levels are often associated with cardiovascular and metabolic traits, including coronary artery disease, type 2 diabetes, blood pressure, waist-hip ratio and body mass index. Our results demonstrate the value of using genetic data from individuals of diverse ancestry and provide insights into the biological mechanisms regulating blood lipids to guide future genetic, biological and therapeutic research.

%B Nat Genet %V 45 %P 1274-1283 %8 2013 Nov %G eng %N 11 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24097068?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.2797 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2013 %T Genetic loci for retinal arteriolar microcirculation. %A Sim, Xueling %A Jensen, Richard A %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Cotch, Mary Frances %A Li, Xiaohui %A Macgregor, Stuart %A Xie, Jing %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Mitchell, Paul %A Klein, Ronald %A Klein, Barbara E K %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Lumley, Thomas %A McKnight, Barbara %A Psaty, Bruce M %A de Jong, Paulus T V M %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Aspelund, Thor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Harris, Tamara B %A Jonasson, Fridbert %A Launer, Lenore J %A Attia, John %A Baird, Paul N %A Harrap, Stephen %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Inouye, Michael %A Rochtchina, Elena %A Scott, Rodney J %A Viswanathan, Ananth %A Li, Guo %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Kuo, Jane Z %A Taylor, Kent D %A Hewitt, Alex W %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Sun, Cong %A Young, Terri L %A Mackey, David A %A van Zuydam, Natalie R %A Doney, Alex S F %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Morris, Andrew D %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Tai, E Shyong %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Vingerling, Johannes R %A Siscovick, David S %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Wong, Tien Y %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Arterioles %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Male %K MEF2 Transcription Factors %K Microcirculation %K Middle Aged %K Models, Genetic %K Retinal Vessels %X

Narrow arterioles in the retina have been shown to predict hypertension as well as other vascular diseases, likely through an increase in the peripheral resistance of the microcirculatory flow. In this study, we performed a genome-wide association study in 18,722 unrelated individuals of European ancestry from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium and the Blue Mountain Eye Study, to identify genetic determinants associated with variations in retinal arteriolar caliber. Retinal vascular calibers were measured on digitized retinal photographs using a standardized protocol. One variant (rs2194025 on chromosome 5q14 near the myocyte enhancer factor 2C MEF2C gene) was associated with retinal arteriolar caliber in the meta-analysis of the discovery cohorts at genome-wide significance of P-value <5×10(-8). This variant was replicated in an additional 3,939 individuals of European ancestry from the Australian Twins Study and Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (rs2194025, P-value = 2.11×10(-12) in combined meta-analysis of discovery and replication cohorts). In independent studies of modest sample sizes, no significant association was found between this variant and clinical outcomes including coronary artery disease, stroke, myocardial infarction or hypertension. In conclusion, we found one novel loci which underlie genetic variation in microvasculature which may be relevant to vascular disease. The relevance of these findings to clinical outcomes remains to be determined.

%B PLoS One %V 8 %P e65804 %8 2013 %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23776548?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0065804 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2013 %T Genome-wide association analyses identify 18 new loci associated with serum urate concentrations. %A Köttgen, Anna %A Albrecht, Eva %A Teumer, Alexander %A Vitart, Veronique %A Krumsiek, Jan %A Hundertmark, Claudia %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A O'Seaghdha, Conall M %A Haller, Toomas %A Yang, Qiong %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Smith, Albert V %A Shi, Julia %A Struchalin, Maksim %A Middelberg, Rita P S %A Brown, Morris J %A Gaffo, Angelo L %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Li, Guo %A Hayward, Caroline %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Huffman, Jennifer %A Yengo, Loic %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Liu, Xuan %A Malerba, Giovanni %A Lopez, Lorna M %A van der Harst, Pim %A Li, Xinzhong %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Johansson, Asa %A Murgia, Federico %A Wild, Sarah H %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Peden, John F %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Steri, Maristella %A Tenesa, Albert %A Lagou, Vasiliki %A Salo, Perttu %A Mangino, Massimo %A Rose, Lynda M %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Woodward, Owen M %A Okada, Yukinori %A Tin, Adrienne %A Müller, Christian %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Putku, Margus %A Czamara, Darina %A Kraft, Peter %A Frogheri, Laura %A Thun, Gian Andri %A Grotevendt, Anne %A Gislason, Gauti Kjartan %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A McArdle, Patrick %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Coresh, Josef %A Schmidt, Helena %A Schallert, Michael %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Nakamura, Yusuke %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Jacobs, David R %A Liu, Kiang %A D'Adamo, Pio %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Campbell, Susan %A Devuyst, Olivier %A Navarro, Pau %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Hastie, Nicholas %A Balkau, Beverley %A Froguel, Philippe %A Esko, Tõnu %A Salumets, Andres %A Khaw, Kay Tee %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Kraja, Aldi %A Zhang, Qunyuan %A Wild, Philipp S %A Scott, Rodney J %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Org, Elin %A Viigimaa, Margus %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Metter, Jeffrey E %A Lupo, Antonio %A Trabetti, Elisabetta %A Sorice, Rossella %A Döring, Angela %A Lattka, Eva %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Theis, Fabian %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Davies, Gail %A Gow, Alan J %A Bruinenberg, Marcel %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Zhang, Weihua %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Lucae, Susanne %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Smit, Johannes H %A Curhan, Gary %A Mudgal, Poorva %A Plenge, Robert M %A Portas, Laura %A Persico, Ivana %A Kirin, Mirna %A Wilson, James F %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Goel, Anuj %A Ongen, Halit %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Imboden, Medea %A von Eckardstein, Arnold %A Cucca, Francesco %A Nagaraja, Ramaiah %A Piras, Maria Grazia %A Nauck, Matthias %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Budde, Kathrin %A Ernst, Florian %A Farrington, Susan M %A Theodoratou, Evropi %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Jula, Antti %A Perola, Markus %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Shin, So-Youn %A Spector, Tim D %A Sala, Cinzia %A Ridker, Paul M %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Meschia, James F %A Nalls, Michael A %A Sharma, Pankaj %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Kamatani, Naoyuki %A Zeller, Tanja %A Burnier, Michel %A Attia, John %A Laan, Maris %A Klopp, Norman %A Hillege, Hans L %A Kloiber, Stefan %A Choi, Hyon %A Pirastu, Mario %A Tore, Silvia %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Völzke, Henry %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Parsa, Afshin %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Whitfield, John B %A Fornage, Myriam %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Siscovick, David S %A Polasek, Ozren %A Campbell, Harry %A Rudan, Igor %A Bouatia-Naji, Nabila %A Metspalu, Andres %A Loos, Ruth J F %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gambaro, Giovanni %A Deary, Ian J %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Chambers, John C %A März, Winfried %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Snieder, Harold %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Wright, Alan F %A Navis, Gerjan %A Watkins, Hugh %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Sanna, Serena %A Schipf, Sabine %A Dunlop, Malcolm G %A Tönjes, Anke %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Raitakari, Olli %A Kao, W H Linda %A Ciullo, Marina %A Fox, Caroline S %A Caulfield, Mark %A Bochud, Murielle %A Gieger, Christian %K Analysis of Variance %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glucose %K Gout %K Humans %K Inhibins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Signal Transduction %K Uric Acid %X

Elevated serum urate concentrations can cause gout, a prevalent and painful inflammatory arthritis. By combining data from >140,000 individuals of European ancestry within the Global Urate Genetics Consortium (GUGC), we identified and replicated 28 genome-wide significant loci in association with serum urate concentrations (18 new regions in or near TRIM46, INHBB, SFMBT1, TMEM171, VEGFA, BAZ1B, PRKAG2, STC1, HNF4G, A1CF, ATXN2, UBE2Q2, IGF1R, NFAT5, MAF, HLF, ACVR1B-ACVRL1 and B3GNT4). Associations for many of the loci were of similar magnitude in individuals of non-European ancestry. We further characterized these loci for associations with gout, transcript expression and the fractional excretion of urate. Network analyses implicate the inhibins-activins signaling pathways and glucose metabolism in systemic urate control. New candidate genes for serum urate concentration highlight the importance of metabolic control of urate production and excretion, which may have implications for the treatment and prevention of gout.

%B Nat Genet %V 45 %P 145-54 %8 2013 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23263486?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.2500 %0 Journal Article %J Genet Epidemiol %D 2013 %T A genome-wide association study for venous thromboembolism: the extended cohorts for heart and aging research in genomic epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium. %A Tang, Weihong %A Teichert, Martina %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Heit, John A %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Li, Guo %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Leebeek, Frank W %A Paré, Guillaume %A de Andrade, Mariza %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Basu, Saonli %A Ruiter, Rikje %A Rose, Lynda %A Armasu, Sebastian M %A Lumley, Thomas %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Lathrop, Mark %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Cushman, Mary %A Hofman, Albert %A Lambert, Jean-Charles %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Pankow, James S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bovill, Edwin G %A Kong, Xiaoxiao %A Tracy, Russell P %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Loth, Daan W %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Ridker, Paul M %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Smith, Nicholas L %K Aged %K Aging %K Case-Control Studies %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Regression Analysis %K Risk Factors %K Venous Thromboembolism %X

Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a common, heritable disease resulting in high rates of hospitalization and mortality. Yet few associations between VTE and genetic variants, all in the coagulation pathway, have been established. To identify additional genetic determinants of VTE, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study (GWAS) among individuals of European ancestry in the extended cohorts for heart and aging research in genomic epidemiology (CHARGE) VTE consortium. The discovery GWAS comprised 1,618 incident VTE cases out of 44,499 participants from six community-based studies. Genotypes for genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were imputed to approximately 2.5 million SNPs in HapMap and association with VTE assessed using study-design appropriate regression methods. Meta-analysis of these results identified two known loci, in F5 and ABO. Top 1,047 tag SNPs (P ≤ 0.0016) from the discovery GWAS were tested for association in an additional 3,231 cases and 3,536 controls from three case-control studies. In the combined data from these two stages, additional genome-wide significant associations were observed on 4q35 at F11 (top SNP rs4253399, intronic to F11) and on 4q28 at FGG (rs6536024, 9.7 kb from FGG; P < 5.0 × 10(-13) for both). The associations at the FGG locus were not completely explained by previously reported variants. Loci at or near SUSD1 and OTUD7A showed borderline yet novel associations (P < 5.0 × 10(-6) ) and constitute new candidate genes. In conclusion, this large GWAS replicated key genetic associations in F5 and ABO, and confirmed the importance of F11 and FGG loci for VTE. Future studies are warranted to better characterize the associations with F11 and FGG and to replicate the new candidate associations.

%B Genet Epidemiol %V 37 %P 512-521 %8 2013 Jul %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23650146?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1002/gepi.21731 %0 Journal Article %J Biol Psychiatry %D 2013 %T A genome-wide association study of depressive symptoms. %A Hek, Karin %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Lahti, Jari %A Terracciano, Antonio %A Teumer, Alexander %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Amin, Najaf %A Bakshis, Erin %A Baumert, Jens %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Liu, Yongmei %A Marciante, Kristin %A Meirelles, Osorio %A Nalls, Michael A %A Sun, Yan V %A Vogelzangs, Nicole %A Yu, Lei %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Bennett, David A %A Boomsma, Dorret %A Cannas, Alessandra %A Coker, Laura H %A de Geus, Eco %A De Jager, Philip L %A Diez-Roux, Ana V %A Purcell, Shaun %A Hu, Frank B %A Rimma, Eric B %A Hunter, David J %A Jensen, Majken K %A Curhan, Gary %A Rice, Kenneth %A Penman, Alan D %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Emeny, Rebecca %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Evans, Denis A %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Fornage, Myriam %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Illig, Thomas %A Kardia, Sharon %A Kelly-Hayes, Margaret %A Koenen, Karestan %A Kraft, Peter %A Kuningas, Maris %A Massaro, Joseph M %A Melzer, David %A Mulas, Antonella %A Mulder, Cornelis L %A Murray, Anna %A Oostra, Ben A %A Palotie, Aarno %A Penninx, Brenda %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Pilling, Luke C %A Psaty, Bruce %A Rawal, Rajesh %A Reiman, Eric M %A Schulz, Andrea %A Shulman, Joshua M %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Smith, Albert V %A Sutin, Angelina R %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völzke, Henry %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Yaffe, Kristine %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Cucca, Francesco %A Harris, Tamara %A Ladwig, Karl-Heinz %A Llewellyn, David J %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Grabe, Hans J %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Newman, Anne B %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Murabito, Joanne %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 %K Depression %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

BACKGROUND: Depression is a heritable trait that exists on a continuum of varying severity and duration. Yet, the search for genetic variants associated with depression has had few successes. We exploit the entire continuum of depression to find common variants for depressive symptoms.

METHODS: In this genome-wide association study, we combined the results of 17 population-based studies assessing depressive symptoms with the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale. Replication of the independent top hits (p<1×10(-5)) was performed in five studies assessing depressive symptoms with other instruments. In addition, we performed a combined meta-analysis of all 22 discovery and replication studies.

RESULTS: The discovery sample comprised 34,549 individuals (mean age of 66.5) and no loci reached genome-wide significance (lowest p = 1.05×10(-7)). Seven independent single nucleotide polymorphisms were considered for replication. In the replication set (n = 16,709), we found suggestive association of one single nucleotide polymorphism with depressive symptoms (rs161645, 5q21, p = 9.19×10(-3)). This 5q21 region reached genome-wide significance (p = 4.78×10(-8)) in the overall meta-analysis combining discovery and replication studies (n = 51,258).

CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that only a large sample comprising more than 50,000 subjects may be sufficiently powered to detect genes for depressive symptoms.

%B Biol Psychiatry %V 73 %P 667-78 %8 2013 Apr 01 %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23290196?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.09.033 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2013 %T A genome-wide association study of early menopause and the combined impact of identified variants. %A Perry, John R B %A Corre, Tanguy %A Esko, Tõnu %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Fischer, Krista %A Franceschini, Nora %A He, Chunyan %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Mangino, Massimo %A Rose, Lynda M %A Vernon Smith, Albert %A Stolk, Lisette %A Sulem, Patrick %A Weedon, Michael N %A Zhuang, Wei V %A Arnold, Alice %A Ashworth, Alan %A Bergmann, Sven %A Buring, Julie E %A Burri, Andrea %A Chen, Constance %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Couper, David J %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara %A Hofman, Albert %A Jones, Michael %A Kraft, Peter %A Launer, Lenore %A Laven, Joop S E %A Li, Guo %A McKnight, Barbara %A Masciullo, Corrado %A Milani, Lili %A Orr, Nicholas %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Sala, Cinzia %A Salumets, Andres %A Schoemaker, Minouk %A Traglia, Michela %A Waeber, Gérard %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Garcia, Melissa %A Hankinson, Susan E %A Hu, Frank B %A Hunter, David J %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Metspalu, Andres %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Newman, Anne B %A Ong, Ken K %A Spector, Tim D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Swerdlow, Anthony J %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A van Dam, Rob M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Visser, Jenny A %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Murray, Anna %K Case-Control Studies %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Menopause, Premature %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Primary Ovarian Insufficiency %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Risk %X

Early menopause (EM) affects up to 10% of the female population, reducing reproductive lifespan considerably. Currently, it constitutes the leading cause of infertility in the western world, affecting mainly those women who postpone their first pregnancy beyond the age of 30 years. The genetic aetiology of EM is largely unknown in the majority of cases. We have undertaken a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) in 3493 EM cases and 13 598 controls from 10 independent studies. No novel genetic variants were discovered, but the 17 variants previously associated with normal age at natural menopause as a quantitative trait (QT) were also associated with EM and primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). Thus, EM has a genetic aetiology which overlaps variation in normal age at menopause and is at least partly explained by the additive effects of the same polygenic variants. The combined effect of the common variants captured by the single nucleotide polymorphism arrays was estimated to account for ∼30% of the variance in EM. The association between the combined 17 variants and the risk of EM was greater than the best validated non-genetic risk factor, smoking.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 22 %P 1465-72 %8 2013 Apr 01 %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23307926?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/dds551 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2013 %T Genome-wide association study of retinopathy in individuals without diabetes. %A Jensen, Richard A %A Sim, Xueling %A Li, Xiaohui %A Cotch, Mary Frances %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Harris, Tamara B %A Jonasson, Fridbert %A Klein, Barbara E K %A Launer, Lenore J %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Cheung, Ning %A Hewitt, Alex W %A Liew, Gerald %A Mitchell, Paul %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Attia, John %A Scott, Rodney %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Lumley, Thomas %A McKnight, Barbara %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Taylor, Kent %A Hofman, Albert %A de Jong, Paulus T V M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Tay, Wan-Ting %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Seielstad, Mark %A Liu, Jianjun %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Saw, Seang-Mei %A Aung, Tin %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Nalls, Mike A %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Kuo, Jane Z %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Klein, Ronald %A Siscovick, David S %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Tai, E Shong %A Vingerling, Johannes %A Wong, Tien Y %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Histone Deacetylases %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Male %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Repressor Proteins %K Retinal Diseases %X

BACKGROUND: Mild retinopathy (microaneurysms or dot-blot hemorrhages) is observed in persons without diabetes or hypertension and may reflect microvascular disease in other organs. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of mild retinopathy in persons without diabetes.

METHODS: A working group agreed on phenotype harmonization, covariate selection and analytic plans for within-cohort GWAS. An inverse-variance weighted fixed effects meta-analysis was performed with GWAS results from six cohorts of 19,411 Caucasians. The primary analysis included individuals without diabetes and secondary analyses were stratified by hypertension status. We also singled out the results from single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously shown to be associated with diabetes and hypertension, the two most common causes of retinopathy.

RESULTS: No SNPs reached genome-wide significance in the primary analysis or the secondary analysis of participants with hypertension. SNP, rs12155400, in the histone deacetylase 9 gene (HDAC9) on chromosome 7, was associated with retinopathy in analysis of participants without hypertension, -1.3±0.23 (beta ± standard error), p = 6.6×10(-9). Evidence suggests this was a false positive finding. The minor allele frequency was low (∼2%), the quality of the imputation was moderate (r(2) ∼0.7), and no other common variants in the HDAC9 gene were associated with the outcome. SNPs found to be associated with diabetes and hypertension in other GWAS were not associated with retinopathy in persons without diabetes or in subgroups with or without hypertension.

CONCLUSIONS: This GWAS of retinopathy in individuals without diabetes showed little evidence of genetic associations. Further studies are needed to identify genes associated with these signs in order to help unravel novel pathways and determinants of microvascular diseases.

%B PLoS One %V 8 %P e54232 %8 2013 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23393555?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0054232 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2013 %T Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies 11 new loci for anthropometric traits and provides insights into genetic architecture. %A Berndt, Sonja I %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Mägi, Reedik %A Ganna, Andrea %A Wheeler, Eleanor %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Justice, Anne E %A Monda, Keri L %A Croteau-Chonka, Damien C %A Day, Felix R %A Esko, Tõnu %A Fall, Tove %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Gentilini, Davide %A Jackson, Anne U %A Luan, Jian'an %A Randall, Joshua C %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Willer, Cristen J %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Wood, Andrew R %A Workalemahu, Tsegaselassie %A Hu, Yi-Juan %A Lee, Sang Hong %A Liang, Liming %A Lin, Dan-Yu %A Min, Josine L %A Neale, Benjamin M %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Yang, Jian %A Albrecht, Eva %A Amin, Najaf %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Cadby, Gemma %A den Heijer, Martin %A Eklund, Niina %A Fischer, Krista %A Goel, Anuj %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Jarick, Ivonne %A Johansson, Asa %A Johnson, Toby %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Kleber, Marcus E %A König, Inke R %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lamina, Claudia %A Lecoeur, Cécile %A Li, Guo %A Mangino, Massimo %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Paternoster, Lavinia %A Pechlivanis, Sonali %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Marjolein J %A Preuss, Michael %A Rose, Lynda M %A Shi, Jianxin %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Surakka, Ida %A Teumer, Alexander %A Trip, Mieke D %A Tyrer, Jonathan %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Absher, Devin %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Atalay, Mustafa %A Attwood, Antony P %A Balmforth, Anthony J %A Basart, Hanneke %A Beilby, John %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Brambilla, Paolo %A Bruinenberg, Marcel %A Campbell, Harry %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chines, Peter S %A Collins, Francis S %A Connell, John M %A Cookson, William O %A de Faire, Ulf %A de Vegt, Femmie %A Dei, Mariano %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Edkins, Sarah %A Estrada, Karol %A Evans, David M %A Farrall, Martin %A Ferrario, Marco M %A Ferrieres, Jean %A Franke, Lude %A Frau, Francesca %A Gejman, Pablo V %A Grallert, Harald %A Grönberg, Henrik %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hall, Alistair S %A Hall, Per %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A Heath, Andrew C %A Hebebrand, Johannes %A Homuth, Georg %A Hu, Frank B %A Hunt, Sarah E %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Jacobs, Kevin B %A Jansson, John-Olov %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Kee, Frank %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Kumari, Meena %A Kuulasmaa, Kari %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laitinen, Jaana H %A Lakka, Timo A %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lind, Lars %A Lindström, Jaana %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liuzzi, Antonio %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Madden, Pamela A %A Magnusson, Patrik K %A Manunta, Paolo %A Marek, Diana %A März, Winfried %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A McKnight, Barbara %A Medland, Sarah E %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Milani, Lili %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Mooser, Vincent %A Mühleisen, Thomas W %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Musk, Arthur W %A Narisu, Narisu %A Navis, Gerjan %A Nicholson, George %A Nohr, Ellen A %A Ong, Ken K %A Oostra, Ben A %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Palotie, Aarno %A Peden, John F %A Pedersen, Nancy %A Peters, Annette %A Polasek, Ozren %A Pouta, Anneli %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Pütter, Carolin %A Radhakrishnan, Aparna %A Raitakari, Olli %A Rendon, Augusto %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rudan, Igor %A Saaristo, Timo E %A Sambrook, Jennifer G %A Sanders, Alan R %A Sanna, Serena %A Saramies, Jouko %A Schipf, Sabine %A Schreiber, Stefan %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Shin, So-Youn %A Signorini, Stefano %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Skrobek, Boris %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Stančáková, Alena %A Stark, Klaus %A Stephens, Jonathan C %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Swift, Amy J %A Theodoraki, Eirini V %A Thorand, Barbara %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Tremoli, Elena %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Viikari, Jorma %A Virtamo, Jarmo %A Vitart, Veronique %A Waeber, Gérard %A Wang, Zhaoming %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Wong, Andrew %A Wright, Alan F %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Cusi, Daniele %A Dedoussis, George V %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Franks, Paul W %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gieger, Christian %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Hinney, Anke %A Hofman, Albert %A Hovingh, Kees G %A Hveem, Kristian %A Illig, Thomas %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jöckel, Karl-Heinz %A Keinanen-Kiukaanniemi, Sirkka M %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Kuh, Diana %A Laakso, Markku %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Levinson, Douglas F %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Metspalu, Andres %A Morris, Andrew D %A Nieminen, Markku S %A Njølstad, Inger %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Ouwehand, Willem H %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Penninx, Brenda %A Power, Chris %A Province, Michael A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Qi, Lu %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Ridker, Paul M %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Snieder, Harold %A Sørensen, Thorkild I A %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Uusitupa, Matti %A van der Harst, Pim %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Wilson, James F %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Barroso, Inês %A Boehnke, Michael %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Deloukas, Panos %A Fox, Caroline S %A Frayling, Timothy %A Groop, Leif C %A Haritunian, Talin %A Heid, Iris M %A Hunter, David %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Moffatt, Miriam F %A Mohlke, Karen L %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Pawitan, Yudi %A Schadt, Eric E %A Schlessinger, David %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Strachan, David P %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Visscher, Peter M %A Di Blasio, Anna Maria %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Morris, Andrew P %A Meyre, David %A Scherag, Andre %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A North, Kari E %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Ingelsson, Erik %K Anthropometry %K Body Height %K Body Mass Index %K Case-Control Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Obesity %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Waist-Hip Ratio %X

Approaches exploiting trait distribution extremes may be used to identify loci associated with common traits, but it is unknown whether these loci are generalizable to the broader population. In a genome-wide search for loci associated with the upper versus the lower 5th percentiles of body mass index, height and waist-to-hip ratio, as well as clinical classes of obesity, including up to 263,407 individuals of European ancestry, we identified 4 new loci (IGFBP4, H6PD, RSRC1 and PPP2R2A) influencing height detected in the distribution tails and 7 new loci (HNF4G, RPTOR, GNAT2, MRPS33P4, ADCY9, HS6ST3 and ZZZ3) for clinical classes of obesity. Further, we find a large overlap in genetic structure and the distribution of variants between traits based on extremes and the general population and little etiological heterogeneity between obesity subgroups.

%B Nat Genet %V 45 %P 501-12 %8 2013 May %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23563607?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.2606 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Clin Nutr %D 2013 %T Genome-wide meta-analysis of observational studies shows common genetic variants associated with macronutrient intake. %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Ngwa, Julius S %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Frazier-Wood, Alexis C %A Houston, Denise K %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Renstrom, Frida %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Qi, Lu %A Chasman, Daniel I %A de Oliveira Otto, Marcia C %A Dhurandhar, Emily J %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Manichaikul, Ani %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Singleton, Andrew %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Viikari, Jorma %A Ye, Zheng %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Barroso, Inês %A Deloukas, Panos %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Hofman, Albert %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A North, Kari E %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Hallmans, Göran %A Kähönen, Mika %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hu, Frank B %A Kalafati, Ioanna-Panagiota %A Raitakari, Olli %A Franco, Oscar H %A Johnson, Andrew %A Emilsson, Valur %A Schrack, Jennifer A %A Semba, Richard D %A Siscovick, David S %A Arnett, Donna K %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Franks, Paul W %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Dedoussis, George %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %K Alleles %K Atherosclerosis %K Body Mass Index %K Dietary Carbohydrates %K Dietary Fats %K Dietary Proteins %K Energy Intake %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Fibroblast Growth Factors %K Follow-Up Studies %K Gene-Environment Interaction %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Life Style %K Obesity %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prospective Studies %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Surveys and Questionnaires %X

BACKGROUND: Macronutrient intake varies substantially between individuals, and there is evidence that this variation is partly accounted for by genetic variants.

OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to identify common genetic variants that are associated with macronutrient intake.

DESIGN: We performed 2-stage genome-wide association (GWA) meta-analysis of macronutrient intake in populations of European descent. Macronutrients were assessed by using food-frequency questionnaires and analyzed as percentages of total energy consumption from total fat, protein, and carbohydrate. From the discovery GWA (n = 38,360), 35 independent loci associated with macronutrient intake at P < 5 × 10(-6) were identified and taken forward to replication in 3 additional cohorts (n = 33,533) from the DietGen Consortium. For one locus, fat mass obesity-associated protein (FTO), cohorts with Illumina MetaboChip genotype data (n = 7724) provided additional replication data.

RESULTS: A variant in the chromosome 19 locus (rs838145) was associated with higher carbohydrate (β ± SE: 0.25 ± 0.04%; P = 1.68 × 10(-8)) and lower fat (β ± SE: -0.21 ± 0.04%; P = 1.57 × 10(-9)) consumption. A candidate gene in this region, fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), encodes a fibroblast growth factor involved in glucose and lipid metabolism. The variants in this locus were associated with circulating FGF21 protein concentrations (P < 0.05) but not mRNA concentrations in blood or brain. The body mass index (BMI)-increasing allele of the FTO variant (rs1421085) was associated with higher protein intake (β ± SE: 0.10 ± 0.02%; P = 9.96 × 10(-10)), independent of BMI (after adjustment for BMI, β ± SE: 0.08 ± 0.02%; P = 3.15 × 10(-7)).

CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that variants in genes involved in nutrient metabolism and obesity are associated with macronutrient consumption in humans. Trials related to this study were registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00005131 (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities), NCT00005133 (Cardiovascular Health Study), NCT00005136 (Family Heart Study), NCT00005121 (Framingham Heart Study), NCT00083369 (Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Triglycerides), NCT01331512 (InCHIANTI Study), and NCT00005487 (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis).

%B Am J Clin Nutr %V 97 %P 1395-402 %8 2013 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23636237?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3945/ajcn.112.052183 %0 Journal Article %J J Nutr %D 2013 %T Higher magnesium intake is associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin, with no evidence of interaction with select genetic loci, in a meta-analysis of 15 CHARGE Consortium Studies. %A Hruby, Adela %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Renstrom, Frida %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Ganna, Andrea %A Hallmans, Göran %A Houston, Denise K %A Jacques, Paul F %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Manichaikul, Ani %A North, Kari E %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Djoussé, Luc %A Grigoriou, Efi %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Pankow, James S %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Riserus, Ulf %A Yannakoulia, Mary %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Hassanali, Neelam %A Liu, Yongmei %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Papoutsakis, Constantina %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Viikari, Jorma %A Groves, Christopher J %A Hofman, Albert %A Lind, Lars %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Franco, Oscar H %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Dedoussis, George V %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Hu, Frank B %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kao, W H Linda %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Siscovick, David S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Franks, Paul W %A Meigs, James B %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %K Blood Glucose %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Humans %K Insulin %K Magnesium %K Male %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Trace Elements %K TRPM Cation Channels %X

Favorable associations between magnesium intake and glycemic traits, such as fasting glucose and insulin, are observed in observational and clinical studies, but whether genetic variation affects these associations is largely unknown. We hypothesized that single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with either glycemic traits or magnesium metabolism affect the association between magnesium intake and fasting glucose and insulin. Fifteen studies from the CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology) Consortium provided data from up to 52,684 participants of European descent without known diabetes. In fixed-effects meta-analyses, we quantified 1) cross-sectional associations of dietary magnesium intake with fasting glucose (mmol/L) and insulin (ln-pmol/L) and 2) interactions between magnesium intake and SNPs related to fasting glucose (16 SNPs), insulin (2 SNPs), or magnesium (8 SNPs) on fasting glucose and insulin. After adjustment for age, sex, energy intake, BMI, and behavioral risk factors, magnesium (per 50-mg/d increment) was inversely associated with fasting glucose [β = -0.009 mmol/L (95% CI: -0.013, -0.005), P < 0.0001] and insulin [-0.020 ln-pmol/L (95% CI: -0.024, -0.017), P < 0.0001]. No magnesium-related SNP or interaction between any SNP and magnesium reached significance after correction for multiple testing. However, rs2274924 in magnesium transporter-encoding TRPM6 showed a nominal association (uncorrected P = 0.03) with glucose, and rs11558471 in SLC30A8 and rs3740393 near CNNM2 showed a nominal interaction (uncorrected, both P = 0.02) with magnesium on glucose. Consistent with other studies, a higher magnesium intake was associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin. Nominal evidence of TRPM6 influence and magnesium interaction with select loci suggests that further investigation is warranted.

%B J Nutr %V 143 %P 345-53 %8 2013 Mar %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23343670?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3945/jn.112.172049 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2013 %T Identification of heart rate-associated loci and their effects on cardiac conduction and rhythm disorders. %A den Hoed, Marcel %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Esko, Tõnu %A Brundel, Bianca J J M %A Peal, David S %A Evans, David M %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Segrè, Ayellet V %A Holm, Hilma %A Handsaker, Robert E %A Westra, Harm-Jan %A Johnson, Toby %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Yang, Jian %A Lundby, Alicia %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Kim, Young Jin %A Go, Min Jin %A Almgren, Peter %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boucher, Gabrielle %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel %A Hadley, David %A van der Harst, Pim %A Hayward, Caroline %A den Heijer, Martin %A Igl, Wilmar %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Luan, Jian'an %A Kemp, John P %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Ladenvall, Claes %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Montasser, May E %A Njajou, Omer T %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A St Pourcain, Beate %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Salo, Perttu %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Vitart, Veronique %A Waite, Lindsay %A Wheeler, William %A Zhang, Weihua %A Draisma, Harmen H M %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kerr, Kathleen F %A Lind, Penelope A %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Onland-Moret, N Charlotte %A Song, Ci %A Weedon, Michael N %A Xie, Weijia %A Yengo, Loic %A Absher, Devin %A Albert, Christine M %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Arking, Dan E %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Balkau, Beverley %A Barlassina, Cristina %A Benaglio, Paola %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bouatia-Naji, Nabila %A Brage, Søren %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Chines, Peter S %A Chung, Mina %A Darbar, Dawood %A Dina, Christian %A Dörr, Marcus %A Elliott, Paul %A Felix, Stephan B %A Fischer, Krista %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Goyette, Philippe %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hofman, Albert %A Holewijn, Suzanne %A Hoogstra-Berends, Femke %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Jensen, Majken K %A Johansson, Asa %A Junttila, Juhani %A Kääb, Stefan %A Kanon, Bart %A Ketkar, Shamika %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Knowles, Joshua W %A Kooner, Angrad S %A Kors, Jan A %A Kumari, Meena %A Milani, Lili %A Laiho, Päivi %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Leusink, Maarten %A Liu, Yongmei %A Luben, Robert N %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Lynch, Stacey N %A Markus, Marcello R P %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A McArdle, Wendy L %A McCarroll, Steven A %A Medland, Sarah E %A Miller, Kathryn A %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Navarro, Pau %A Nelis, Mari %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Ong, Ken K %A Newman, Anne B %A Peters, Annette %A Polasek, Ozren %A Pouta, Anneli %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Ring, Susan M %A Rossin, Elizabeth J %A Rudan, Diana %A Sanna, Serena %A Scott, Robert A %A Sehmi, Jaban S %A Sharp, Stephen %A Shin, Jordan T %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Smith, Albert V %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Spector, Tim D %A Stewart, Chip %A Stringham, Heather M %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Whitfield, John B %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilson, James F %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Wong, Andrew %A Wong, Quenna %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Zitting, Paavo %A Boer, Jolanda M A %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Ekelund, Ulf %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Froguel, Philippe %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kronmal, Richard A %A Kuh, Diana %A Lind, Lars %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Oostra, Ben A %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Quertermous, Thomas %A Rotter, Jerome I %A van der Schouw, Yvonne T %A Verschuren, W M Monique %A Walker, Mark %A Albanes, Demetrius %A Arnar, David O %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Boehnke, Michael %A de Boer, Rudolf A %A Bouchard, Claude %A Caulfield, W L Mark %A Chambers, John C %A Curhan, Gary %A Cusi, Daniele %A Eriksson, Johan %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Glorioso, Nicola %A de Graaf, Jacqueline %A Groop, Leif %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hsueh, Wen-Chi %A Hu, Frank B %A Huikuri, Heikki V %A Hunter, David J %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Isomaa, Bo %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kraft, Peter %A Iacoviello, Licia %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa L %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Navis, Gerjan %A Nieminen, Markku S %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Poulter, Neil R %A Qi, Lu %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rimm, Eric B %A Rioux, John D %A Rizzi, Federica %A Rudan, Igor %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sever, Peter S %A Shields, Denis C %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Stanton, Alice V %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Strachan, David P %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tuomilehto, Jaako %A van Veldhuisen, Dirk J %A Virtamo, Jarmo %A Viikari, Jorma %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Cho, Yoon Shin %A Olsen, Jesper V %A Visscher, Peter M %A Willer, Cristen %A Franke, Lude %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Thompson, John R %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Metspalu, Andres %A Perola, Markus %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Smith, George Davey %A Stefansson, Kari %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Sibon, Ody C M %A Milan, David J %A Snieder, Harold %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Loos, Ruth J F %K Animals %K Arrhythmias, Cardiac %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Heart Conduction System %K Heart Rate %K Humans %K Metabolic Networks and Pathways %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %X

Elevated resting heart rate is associated with greater risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality. In a 2-stage meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in up to 181,171 individuals, we identified 14 new loci associated with heart rate and confirmed associations with all 7 previously established loci. Experimental downregulation of gene expression in Drosophila melanogaster and Danio rerio identified 20 genes at 11 loci that are relevant for heart rate regulation and highlight a role for genes involved in signal transmission, embryonic cardiac development and the pathophysiology of dilated cardiomyopathy, congenital heart failure and/or sudden cardiac death. In addition, genetic susceptibility to increased heart rate is associated with altered cardiac conduction and reduced risk of sick sinus syndrome, and both heart rate-increasing and heart rate-decreasing variants associate with risk of atrial fibrillation. Our findings provide fresh insights into the mechanisms regulating heart rate and identify new therapeutic targets.

%B Nat Genet %V 45 %P 621-31 %8 2013 Jun %G eng %N 6 %R 10.1038/ng.2610 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2013 %T Insights into the genetic architecture of early stage age-related macular degeneration: a genome-wide association study meta-analysis. %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Smith, Albert V %A Cornes, Belinda K %A Buitendijk, Gabriëlle H S %A Jensen, Richard A %A Sim, Xueling %A Aspelund, Thor %A Aung, Tin %A Baird, Paul N %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Cheng, Ching Yu %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara %A Hewitt, Alex W %A Inouye, Michael %A Jonasson, Fridbert %A Klein, Barbara E K %A Launer, Lenore %A Li, Xiaohui %A Liew, Gerald %A Lumley, Thomas %A McElduff, Patrick %A McKnight, Barbara %A Mitchell, Paul %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rochtchina, Elena %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Scott, Rodney J %A Tay, Wanting %A Taylor, Kent %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Viswanathan, Ananth %A Xie, Sophia %A Vingerling, Johannes R %A Klaver, Caroline C W %A Tai, E Shyong %A Siscovick, David %A Klein, Ronald %A Cotch, Mary Frances %A Wong, Tien Y %A Attia, John %A Wang, Jie Jin %K Apolipoproteins E %K Complement Factor H %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors %K Macular Degeneration %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proteins %K Risk Factors %K Zinc Finger Protein Gli3 %X

Genetic factors explain a majority of risk variance for age-related macular degeneration (AMD). While genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for late AMD implicate genes in complement, inflammatory and lipid pathways, the genetic architecture of early AMD has been relatively under studied. We conducted a GWAS meta-analysis of early AMD, including 4,089 individuals with prevalent signs of early AMD (soft drusen and/or retinal pigment epithelial changes) and 20,453 individuals without these signs. For various published late AMD risk loci, we also compared effect sizes between early and late AMD using an additional 484 individuals with prevalent late AMD. GWAS meta-analysis confirmed previously reported association of variants at the complement factor H (CFH) (peak P = 1.5×10(-31)) and age-related maculopathy susceptibility 2 (ARMS2) (P = 4.3×10(-24)) loci, and suggested Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) polymorphisms (rs2075650; P = 1.1×10(-6)) associated with early AMD. Other possible loci that did not reach GWAS significance included variants in the zinc finger protein gene GLI3 (rs2049622; P = 8.9×10(-6)) and upstream of GLI2 (rs6721654; P = 6.5×10(-6)), encoding retinal Sonic hedgehog signalling regulators, and in the tyrosinase (TYR) gene (rs621313; P = 3.5×10(-6)), involved in melanin biosynthesis. For a range of published, late AMD risk loci, estimated effect sizes were significantly lower for early than late AMD. This study confirms the involvement of multiple established AMD risk variants in early AMD, but suggests weaker genetic effects on the risk of early AMD relative to late AMD. Several biological processes were suggested to be potentially specific for early AMD, including pathways regulating RPE cell melanin content and signalling pathways potentially involved in retinal regeneration, generating hypotheses for further investigation.

%B PLoS One %V 8 %P e53830 %8 2013 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23326517?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0053830 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2013 %T Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies identifies six new Loci for serum calcium concentrations. %A O'Seaghdha, Conall M %A Wu, Hongsheng %A Yang, Qiong %A Kapur, Karen %A Guessous, Idris %A Zuber, Annie Mercier %A Köttgen, Anna %A Stoudmann, Candice %A Teumer, Alexander %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Mangino, Massimo %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Zhang, Weihua %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Li, Guo %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Portas, Laura %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Hayward, Caroline %A Lohman, Kurt %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Firsov, Dmitri %A Sorice, Rossella %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Brockhaus, A Catharina %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Ernst, Florian D %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Launer, Lenore J %A Mace, Aurelien %A Boerwinckle, Eric %A Arking, Dan E %A Tanikawa, Chizu %A Nakamura, Yusuke %A Brown, Morris J %A Gaspoz, Jean-Michel %A Theler, Jean-Marc %A Siscovick, David S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Bergmann, Sven %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Vitart, Veronique %A Wright, Alan F %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Boban, Mladen %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Navarro, Pau %A Brown, Edward M %A Estrada, Karol %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Harris, Tamara B %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Hernandez, Dena %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A d'Adamo, Adamo Pio %A Robino, Antonietta %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Meisinger, Christa %A Davies, Gail %A Starr, John M %A Chambers, John C %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Huang, Jie %A Murgia, Federico %A Wild, Sarah H %A Campbell, Harry %A Morris, Andrew P %A Franco, Oscar H %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Völker, Uwe %A Hannemann, Anke %A Biffar, Reiner %A Hoffmann, Wolfgang %A Shin, So-Youn %A Lescuyer, Pierre %A Henry, Hughes %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Ciullo, Marina %A Gieger, Christian %A März, Winfried %A Lind, Lars %A Spector, Tim D %A Smith, Albert V %A Rudan, Igor %A Wilson, James F %A Polasek, Ozren %A Deary, Ian J %A Pirastu, Mario %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Liu, Yongmei %A Kestenbaum, Bryan %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Nauck, Matthias %A Kao, W H Linda %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Bonny, Olivier %A Fox, Caroline S %A Bochud, Murielle %K Animals %K Bone and Bones %K Bone Density %K Calcium %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Homeostasis %K Humans %K Kidney %K Mice %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Calcium is vital to the normal functioning of multiple organ systems and its serum concentration is tightly regulated. Apart from CASR, the genes associated with serum calcium are largely unknown. We conducted a genome-wide association meta-analysis of 39,400 individuals from 17 population-based cohorts and investigated the 14 most strongly associated loci in ≤ 21,679 additional individuals. Seven loci (six new regions) in association with serum calcium were identified and replicated. Rs1570669 near CYP24A1 (P = 9.1E-12), rs10491003 upstream of GATA3 (P = 4.8E-09) and rs7481584 in CARS (P = 1.2E-10) implicate regions involved in Mendelian calcemic disorders: Rs1550532 in DGKD (P = 8.2E-11), also associated with bone density, and rs7336933 near DGKH/KIAA0564 (P = 9.1E-10) are near genes that encode distinct isoforms of diacylglycerol kinase. Rs780094 is in GCKR. We characterized the expression of these genes in gut, kidney, and bone, and demonstrate modulation of gene expression in bone in response to dietary calcium in mice. Our results shed new light on the genetics of calcium homeostasis.

%B PLoS Genet %V 9 %P e1003796 %8 2013 %G eng %N 9 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24068962?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003796 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2013 %T A meta-analysis of thyroid-related traits reveals novel loci and gender-specific differences in the regulation of thyroid function. %A Porcu, Eleonora %A Medici, Marco %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Volpato, Claudia B %A Wilson, Scott G %A Cappola, Anne R %A Bos, Steffan D %A Deelen, Joris %A den Heijer, Martin %A Freathy, Rachel M %A Lahti, Jari %A Liu, Chunyu %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Nolte, Ilja M %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Trompet, Stella %A Arnold, Alice %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Beekman, Marian %A Böhringer, Stefan %A Brown, Suzanne J %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Camaschella, Clara %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Davies, Gail %A de Visser, Marieke C H %A Ford, Ian %A Forsen, Tom %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Fugazzola, Laura %A Gögele, Martin %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Hermus, Ad R %A Hofman, Albert %A Houwing-Duistermaat, Jeanine J %A Jensen, Richard A %A Kajantie, Eero %A Kloppenburg, Margreet %A Lim, Ee M %A Masciullo, Corrado %A Mariotti, Stefano %A Minelli, Cosetta %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Nagaraja, Ramaiah %A Netea-Maier, Romana T %A Palotie, Aarno %A Persani, Luca %A Piras, Maria G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Richards, J Brent %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Sala, Cinzia %A Sabra, Mona M %A Sattar, Naveed %A Shields, Beverley M %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Starr, John M %A Stott, David J %A Sweep, Fred C G J %A Usala, Gianluca %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A van Heemst, Diana %A van Mullem, Alies %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Visser, W Edward %A Walsh, John P %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Zhai, Guangju %A Cucca, Francesco %A Deary, Ian J %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Fox, Caroline S %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Schlessinger, David %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Slagboom, Eline P %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaidya, Bijay %A Visser, Theo J %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Meulenbelt, Ingrid %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Spector, Tim D %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Sanna, Serena %A Peeters, Robin P %A Naitza, Silvia %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hyperthyroidism %K Hypothyroidism %K Male %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Genetic %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Sex Characteristics %K Signal Transduction %K Thyroid Gland %K Thyrotropin %K Thyroxine %X

Thyroid hormone is essential for normal metabolism and development, and overt abnormalities in thyroid function lead to common endocrine disorders affecting approximately 10% of individuals over their life span. In addition, even mild alterations in thyroid function are associated with weight changes, atrial fibrillation, osteoporosis, and psychiatric disorders. To identify novel variants underlying thyroid function, we performed a large meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for serum levels of the highly heritable thyroid function markers TSH and FT4, in up to 26,420 and 17,520 euthyroid subjects, respectively. Here we report 26 independent associations, including several novel loci for TSH (PDE10A, VEGFA, IGFBP5, NFIA, SOX9, PRDM11, FGF7, INSR, ABO, MIR1179, NRG1, MBIP, ITPK1, SASH1, GLIS3) and FT4 (LHX3, FOXE1, AADAT, NETO1/FBXO15, LPCAT2/CAPNS2). Notably, only limited overlap was detected between TSH and FT4 associated signals, in spite of the feedback regulation of their circulating levels by the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis. Five of the reported loci (PDE8B, PDE10A, MAF/LOC440389, NETO1/FBXO15, and LPCAT2/CAPNS2) show strong gender-specific differences, which offer clues for the known sexual dimorphism in thyroid function and related pathologies. Importantly, the TSH-associated loci contribute not only to variation within the normal range, but also to TSH values outside the reference range, suggesting that they may be involved in thyroid dysfunction. Overall, our findings explain, respectively, 5.64% and 2.30% of total TSH and FT4 trait variance, and they improve the current knowledge of the regulation of hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis function and the consequences of genetic variation for hypo- or hyperthyroidism.

%B PLoS Genet %V 9 %P e1003266 %8 2013 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23408906?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003266 %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2013 %T Multiethnic meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in >100 000 subjects identifies 23 fibrinogen-associated Loci but no strong evidence of a causal association between circulating fibrinogen and cardiovascular disease. %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Huang, Jie %A Chasman, Daniel %A Naitza, Silvia %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Reiner, Alex P %A Folkersen, Lasse %A Basu, Saonli %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Trompet, Stella %A Mälarstig, Anders %A Baumert, Jens %A Bis, Joshua C %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hottenga, Jouke J %A Shin, So-Youn %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Lahti, Jari %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Oudot-Mellakh, Tiphaine %A Wilson, James F %A Navarro, Pau %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Redline, Susan %A Mehra, Reena %A Pulanic, Drazen %A Rudan, Igor %A Wright, Alan F %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Polasek, Ozren %A Wild, Sarah H %A Campbell, Harry %A Curb, J David %A Wallace, Robert %A Liu, Simin %A Eaton, Charles B %A Becker, Diane M %A Becker, Lewis C %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Palotie, Aarno %A Fornage, Myriam %A Green, David %A Gross, Myron %A Davies, Gail %A Harris, Sarah E %A Liewald, David C %A Starr, John M %A Williams, Frances M K %A Grant, Peter J %A Spector, Timothy D %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Silveira, Angela %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Hofman, Albert %A van Dongen, Jenny %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Yao, Jie %A Swords Jenny, Nancy %A Haritunians, Talin %A McKnight, Barbara %A Lumley, Thomas %A Taylor, Kent D %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Peters, Annette %A Gieger, Christian %A Illig, Thomas %A Grotevendt, Anne %A Homuth, Georg %A Völzke, Henry %A Kocher, Thomas %A Goel, Anuj %A Franzosi, Maria Grazia %A Seedorf, Udo %A Clarke, Robert %A Steri, Maristella %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Sanna, Serena %A Schlessinger, David %A Stott, David J %A Sattar, Naveed %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Rumley, Ann %A Lowe, Gordon D %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Song, Jaejoon %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Rose, Lynda M %A Franco-Cereceda, Anders %A Teichert, Martina %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Bevan, Steve %A Dichgans, Martin %A Rothwell, Peter M %A Sudlow, Cathie L M %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Chambers, John C %A Saleheen, Danish %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Danesh, John %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Jacobs, David %A Deary, Ian J %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Tracy, Russell P %A Hayward, Caroline %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Cucca, Francesco %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Eriksson, Per %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Markus, Hugh S %A Watkins, Hugh %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Tregouet, David %A Ridker, Paul M %A Tang, Weihong %A Strachan, David P %A Hamsten, Anders %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K Adolescent %K Adult %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K Coronary Artery Disease %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Fibrinogen %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Hispanic Americans %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Myocardial Infarction %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %K Stroke %K Venous Thromboembolism %K Young Adult %X

BACKGROUND: Estimates of the heritability of plasma fibrinogen concentration, an established predictor of cardiovascular disease, range from 34% to 50%. Genetic variants so far identified by genome-wide association studies explain only a small proportion (<2%) of its variation.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted a meta-analysis of 28 genome-wide association studies including >90 000 subjects of European ancestry, the first genome-wide association meta-analysis of fibrinogen levels in 7 studies in blacks totaling 8289 samples, and a genome-wide association study in Hispanics totaling 1366 samples. Evaluation for association of single-nucleotide polymorphisms with clinical outcomes included a total of 40 695 cases and 85 582 controls for coronary artery disease, 4752 cases and 24 030 controls for stroke, and 3208 cases and 46 167 controls for venous thromboembolism. Overall, we identified 24 genome-wide significant (P<5×10(-8)) independent signals in 23 loci, including 15 novel associations, together accounting for 3.7% of plasma fibrinogen variation. Gene-set enrichment analysis highlighted key roles in fibrinogen regulation for the 3 structural fibrinogen genes and pathways related to inflammation, adipocytokines, and thyrotrophin-releasing hormone signaling. Whereas lead single-nucleotide polymorphisms in a few loci were significantly associated with coronary artery disease, the combined effect of all 24 fibrinogen-associated lead single-nucleotide polymorphisms was not significant for coronary artery disease, stroke, or venous thromboembolism.

CONCLUSIONS: We identify 23 robustly associated fibrinogen loci, 15 of which are new. Clinical outcome analysis of these loci does not support a causal relationship between circulating levels of fibrinogen and coronary artery disease, stroke, or venous thromboembolism.

%B Circulation %V 128 %P 1310-24 %8 2013 Sep 17 %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23969696?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.002251 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2013 %T Sex-stratified genome-wide association studies including 270,000 individuals show sexual dimorphism in genetic loci for anthropometric traits. %A Randall, Joshua C %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Berndt, Sonja I %A Jackson, Anne U %A Monda, Keri L %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Esko, Tõnu %A Mägi, Reedik %A Li, Shengxu %A Workalemahu, Tsegaselassie %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Croteau-Chonka, Damien C %A Day, Felix R %A Fall, Tove %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Locke, Adam E %A Mathieson, Iain %A Scherag, Andre %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A Wood, Andrew R %A Liang, Liming %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T %A Dimas, Antigone S %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Min, Josine L %A Nicholson, George %A Clegg, Deborah J %A Person, Thomas %A Krohn, Jon P %A Bauer, Sabrina %A Buechler, Christa %A Eisinger, Kristina %A Bonnefond, Amélie %A Froguel, Philippe %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Harris, Tamara B %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Grönberg, Henrik %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Li, Guo %A Beckmann, Jacques S %A Johnson, Toby %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Teder-Laving, Maris %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Amin, Najaf %A Oostra, Ben A %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Province, Michael A %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Surakka, Ida %A Collins, Francis S %A Saramies, Jouko %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Jula, Antti %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Hengstenberg, Christian %A Loley, Christina %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Lamina, Claudia %A Wichmann, H Erich %A Albrecht, Eva %A Gieger, Christian %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Johansson, Asa %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A Penninx, Brenda %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Campbell, Harry %A Wilson, James F %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Farrall, Martin %A Goel, Anuj %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Estrada, Karol %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Zillikens, M Carola %A den Heijer, Martin %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Maschio, Andrea %A Hall, Per %A Tyrer, Jonathan %A Teumer, Alexander %A Völzke, Henry %A Kovacs, Peter %A Tönjes, Anke %A Mangino, Massimo %A Spector, Tim D %A Hayward, Caroline %A Rudan, Igor %A Hall, Alistair S %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Attwood, Antony Paul %A Sambrook, Jennifer G %A Hung, Joseph %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Boucher, Gabrielle %A Huikuri, Heikki %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Eklund, Niina %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Barlassina, Cristina %A Rivolta, Carlo %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Snieder, Harold %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Gejman, Pablo V %A Shi, Jianxin %A Jacobs, Kevin B %A Wang, Zhaoming %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Navis, Gerjan %A van der Harst, Pim %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Medland, Sarah E %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Yang, Jian %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rose, Lynda M %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Raitakari, Olli %A Absher, Devin %A Iribarren, Carlos %A Basart, Hanneke %A Hovingh, Kees G %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Power, Chris %A Anderson, Denise %A Beilby, John P %A Hui, Jennie %A Jolley, Jennifer %A Sager, Hendrik %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Perola, Markus %A Lindström, Jaana %A Swift, Amy J %A Uusitupa, Matti %A Atalay, Mustafa %A Lakka, Timo A %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Bolton, Jennifer L %A Fowkes, Gerry %A Fraser, Ross M %A Price, Jackie F %A Fischer, Krista %A Krjutå Kov, Kaarel %A Metspalu, Andres %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Luan, Jian'an %A Ong, Ken K %A Chines, Peter S %A Keinanen-Kiukaanniemi, Sirkka M %A Saaristo, Timo E %A Edkins, Sarah %A Franks, Paul W %A Hallmans, Göran %A Shungin, Dmitry %A Morris, Andrew David %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Erbel, Raimund %A Moebus, Susanne %A Nöthen, Markus M %A Pechlivanis, Sonali %A Hveem, Kristian %A Narisu, Narisu %A Hamsten, Anders %A Humphries, Steve E %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Tremoli, Elena %A Grallert, Harald %A Thorand, Barbara %A Illig, Thomas %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Peters, Annette %A Boehm, Bernhard O %A Kleber, Marcus E %A März, Winfried %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Arveiler, Dominique %A Cesana, Giancarlo %A Kuulasmaa, Kari %A Virtamo, Jarmo %A Yarnell, John W G %A Kuh, Diana %A Wong, Andrew %A Lind, Lars %A de Faire, Ulf %A Gigante, Bruna %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Dedoussis, George %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Kolovou, Genovefa %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Njølstad, Inger %A Wilsgaard, Tom %A Ganna, Andrea %A Rehnberg, Emil %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kumari, Meena %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Barroso, Inês %A Boehnke, Michael %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Deloukas, Panos %A Fox, Caroline S %A Frayling, Timothy %A Groop, Leif C %A Haritunians, Talin %A Hunter, David %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kaplan, Robert %A Mohlke, Karen L %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Schlessinger, David %A Strachan, David P %A Stefansson, Kari %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Qi, Lu %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A North, Kari E %A Heid, Iris M %K Anthropometry %K Body Height %K Body Mass Index %K Body Weight %K Body Weights and Measures %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Sex Characteristics %K Waist Circumference %K Waist-Hip Ratio %X

Given the anthropometric differences between men and women and previous evidence of sex-difference in genetic effects, we conducted a genome-wide search for sexually dimorphic associations with height, weight, body mass index, waist circumference, hip circumference, and waist-to-hip-ratio (133,723 individuals) and took forward 348 SNPs into follow-up (additional 137,052 individuals) in a total of 94 studies. Seven loci displayed significant sex-difference (FDR<5%), including four previously established (near GRB14/COBLL1, LYPLAL1/SLC30A10, VEGFA, ADAMTS9) and three novel anthropometric trait loci (near MAP3K1, HSD17B4, PPARG), all of which were genome-wide significant in women (P<5×10(-8)), but not in men. Sex-differences were apparent only for waist phenotypes, not for height, weight, BMI, or hip circumference. Moreover, we found no evidence for genetic effects with opposite directions in men versus women. The PPARG locus is of specific interest due to its role in diabetes genetics and therapy. Our results demonstrate the value of sex-specific GWAS to unravel the sexually dimorphic genetic underpinning of complex traits.

%B PLoS Genet %V 9 %P e1003500 %8 2013 Jun %G eng %N 6 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23754948?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003500 %0 Journal Article %J BMJ %D 2014 %T Association between alcohol and cardiovascular disease: Mendelian randomisation analysis based on individual participant data. %A Holmes, Michael V %A Dale, Caroline E %A Zuccolo, Luisa %A Silverwood, Richard J %A Guo, Yiran %A Ye, Zheng %A Prieto-Merino, David %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Trompet, Stella %A Wong, Andrew %A Cavadino, Alana %A Drogan, Dagmar %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Li, Shanshan %A Yesupriya, Ajay %A Leusink, Maarten %A Sundström, Johan %A Hubacek, Jaroslav A %A Pikhart, Hynek %A Swerdlow, Daniel I %A Panayiotou, Andrie G %A Borinskaya, Svetlana A %A Finan, Chris %A Shah, Sonia %A Kuchenbaecker, Karoline B %A Shah, Tina %A Engmann, Jorgen %A Folkersen, Lasse %A Eriksson, Per %A Ricceri, Fulvio %A Melander, Olle %A Sacerdote, Carlotta %A Gamble, Dale M %A Rayaprolu, Sruti %A Ross, Owen A %A McLachlan, Stela %A Vikhireva, Olga %A Sluijs, Ivonne %A Scott, Robert A %A Adamkova, Vera %A Flicker, Leon %A Bockxmeer, Frank M van %A Power, Christine %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Meade, Tom %A Marmot, Michael G %A Ferro, Jose M %A Paulos-Pinheiro, Sofia %A Humphries, Steve E %A Talmud, Philippa J %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Verweij, Niek %A Linneberg, Allan %A Skaaby, Tea %A Doevendans, Pieter A %A Cramer, Maarten J %A van der Harst, Pim %A Klungel, Olaf H %A Dowling, Nicole F %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Kumari, Meena %A Nicolaides, Andrew N %A Weikert, Cornelia %A Boeing, Heiner %A Ebrahim, Shah %A Gaunt, Tom R %A Price, Jackie F %A Lannfelt, Lars %A Peasey, Anne %A Kubinova, Ruzena %A Pajak, Andrzej %A Malyutina, Sofia %A Voevoda, Mikhail I %A Tamosiunas, Abdonas %A Maitland-van der Zee, Anke H %A Norman, Paul E %A Hankey, Graeme J %A Bergmann, Manuela M %A Hofman, Albert %A Franco, Oscar H %A Cooper, Jackie %A Palmen, Jutta %A Spiering, Wilko %A de Jong, Pim A %A Kuh, Diana %A Hardy, Rebecca %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Ford, Ian %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Almeida, Osvaldo P %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Hamsten, Anders %A Husemoen, Lise Lotte N %A Tjønneland, Anne %A Tolstrup, Janne S %A Rimm, Eric %A Beulens, Joline W J %A Verschuren, W M Monique %A Onland-Moret, N Charlotte %A Hofker, Marten H %A Wannamethee, S Goya %A Whincup, Peter H %A Morris, Richard %A Vicente, Astrid M %A Watkins, Hugh %A Farrall, Martin %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Meschia, James %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Sharp, Stephen J %A Fornage, Myriam %A Kooperberg, Charles %A LaCroix, Andrea Z %A Dai, James Y %A Lanktree, Matthew B %A Siscovick, David S %A Jorgenson, Eric %A Spring, Bonnie %A Coresh, Josef %A Li, Yun R %A Buxbaum, Sarah G %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Ellison, R Curtis %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Patel, Sanjay R %A Redline, Susan %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Hoogeveen, Ron C %A Hakonarson, Hakon %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Sattar, Naveed %A Lawlor, Debbie A %A Whittaker, John %A Davey Smith, George %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Wilson, James G %A Lange, Leslie A %A Hamidovic, Ajna %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Nordestgaard, Børge G %A Bobak, Martin %A Leon, David A %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Palmer, Tom M %A Reiner, Alex P %A Keating, Brendan J %A Dudbridge, Frank %A Casas, Juan P %K Adult %K Aged %K Alcohol Dehydrogenase %K Alcohol Drinking %K Biomarkers %K Coronary Disease %K Female %K Genetic Markers %K Genotype %K Humans %K Male %K Mendelian Randomization Analysis %K Middle Aged %K Models, Statistical %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Stroke %X

OBJECTIVE: To use the rs1229984 variant in the alcohol dehydrogenase 1B gene (ADH1B) as an instrument to investigate the causal role of alcohol in cardiovascular disease.

DESIGN: Mendelian randomisation meta-analysis of 56 epidemiological studies.

PARTICIPANTS: 261 991 individuals of European descent, including 20 259 coronary heart disease cases and 10 164 stroke events. Data were available on ADH1B rs1229984 variant, alcohol phenotypes, and cardiovascular biomarkers.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Odds ratio for coronary heart disease and stroke associated with the ADH1B variant in all individuals and by categories of alcohol consumption.

RESULTS: Carriers of the A-allele of ADH1B rs1229984 consumed 17.2% fewer units of alcohol per week (95% confidence interval 15.6% to 18.9%), had a lower prevalence of binge drinking (odds ratio 0.78 (95% CI 0.73 to 0.84)), and had higher abstention (odds ratio 1.27 (1.21 to 1.34)) than non-carriers. Rs1229984 A-allele carriers had lower systolic blood pressure (-0.88 (-1.19 to -0.56) mm Hg), interleukin-6 levels (-5.2% (-7.8 to -2.4%)), waist circumference (-0.3 (-0.6 to -0.1) cm), and body mass index (-0.17 (-0.24 to -0.10) kg/m(2)). Rs1229984 A-allele carriers had lower odds of coronary heart disease (odds ratio 0.90 (0.84 to 0.96)). The protective association of the ADH1B rs1229984 A-allele variant remained the same across all categories of alcohol consumption (P=0.83 for heterogeneity). Although no association of rs1229984 was identified with the combined subtypes of stroke, carriers of the A-allele had lower odds of ischaemic stroke (odds ratio 0.83 (0.72 to 0.95)).

CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with a genetic variant associated with non-drinking and lower alcohol consumption had a more favourable cardiovascular profile and a reduced risk of coronary heart disease than those without the genetic variant. This suggests that reduction of alcohol consumption, even for light to moderate drinkers, is beneficial for cardiovascular health.

%B BMJ %V 349 %P g4164 %8 2014 Jul 10 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25011450?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1136/bmj.g4164 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2014 %T Association of low-frequency and rare coding-sequence variants with blood lipids and coronary heart disease in 56,000 whites and blacks. %A Peloso, Gina M %A Auer, Paul L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Voorman, Arend %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Stitziel, Nathan O %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Khetarpal, Sumeet A %A Crosby, Jacy R %A Fornage, Myriam %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Davies, Gail %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Davis, Brian %A Lohman, Kurt %A Joon, Aron Y %A Smith, Albert V %A Grove, Megan L %A Zanoni, Paolo %A Redon, Valeska %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Lawson, Kim %A Peters, Ulrike %A Carlson, Christopher %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A Ryckman, Kelli K %A Mackey, Rachel H %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Siscovick, David S %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Pankow, James S %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Harris, Tamara B %A Taylor, Kent D %A Stafford, Jeanette M %A Reynolds, Lindsay M %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Franco, Oscar H %A Patel, Aniruddh P %A Lu, Yingchang %A Hindy, George %A Gottesman, Omri %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Melander, Olle %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Duga, Stefano %A Merlini, Piera Angelica %A Farrall, Martin %A Goel, Anuj %A Asselta, Rosanna %A Girelli, Domenico %A Martinelli, Nicola %A Shah, Svati H %A Kraus, William E %A Li, Mingyao %A Rader, Daniel J %A Reilly, Muredach P %A McPherson, Ruth %A Watkins, Hugh %A Ardissino, Diego %A Zhang, Qunyuan %A Wang, Judy %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Taylor, Herman A %A Correa, Adolfo %A Griswold, Michael E %A Lange, Leslie A %A Starr, John M %A Rudan, Igor %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Launer, Lenore J %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Levy, Daniel %A Chen, Y-D Ida %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Hayward, Caroline %A Polasek, Ozren %A Deary, Ian J %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Wilson, James G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Rich, Stephen S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Rice, Kenneth %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Cupples, L Adrienne %K 1-Alkyl-2-acetylglycerophosphocholine Esterase %K Adult %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Aged %K Alleles %K Animals %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Cohort Studies %K Coronary Disease %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Code %K Genetic Variation %K Humans %K Linear Models %K Male %K Mice %K Mice, Inbred C57BL %K Microtubule-Associated Proteins %K Middle Aged %K Phenotype %K Sequence Analysis, DNA %K Subtilisins %K Triglycerides %X

Low-frequency coding DNA sequence variants in the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 gene (PCSK9) lower plasma low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), protect against risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), and have prompted the development of a new class of therapeutics. It is uncertain whether the PCSK9 example represents a paradigm or an isolated exception. We used the "Exome Array" to genotype >200,000 low-frequency and rare coding sequence variants across the genome in 56,538 individuals (42,208 European ancestry [EA] and 14,330 African ancestry [AA]) and tested these variants for association with LDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglycerides. Although we did not identify new genes associated with LDL-C, we did identify four low-frequency (frequencies between 0.1% and 2%) variants (ANGPTL8 rs145464906 [c.361C>T; p.Gln121*], PAFAH1B2 rs186808413 [c.482C>T; p.Ser161Leu], COL18A1 rs114139997 [c.331G>A; p.Gly111Arg], and PCSK7 rs142953140 [c.1511G>A; p.Arg504His]) with large effects on HDL-C and/or triglycerides. None of these four variants was associated with risk for CHD, suggesting that examples of low-frequency coding variants with robust effects on both lipids and CHD will be limited.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 94 %P 223-32 %8 2014 Feb 06 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24507774?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.01.009 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2014 %T The challenges of genome-wide interaction studies: lessons to learn from the analysis of HDL blood levels. %A van Leeuwen, Elisabeth M %A Smouter, Françoise A S %A Kam-Thong, Tony %A Karbalai, Nazanin %A Smith, Albert V %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Li, Guo %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Bis, Joshua C %A White, Charles C %A Jaiswal, Alok %A Oostra, Ben A %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Müller-Myhsok, Bertram %A Karssen, Lennart C %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have revealed 74 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) blood levels. This study is, to our knowledge, the first genome-wide interaction study (GWIS) to identify SNP×SNP interactions associated with HDL levels. We performed a GWIS in the Rotterdam Study (RS) cohort I (RS-I) using the GLIDE tool which leverages the massively parallel computing power of Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) to perform linear regression on all genome-wide pairs of SNPs. By performing a meta-analysis together with Rotterdam Study cohorts II and III (RS-II and RS-III), we were able to filter 181 interaction terms with a p-value<1 · 10-8 that replicated in the two independent cohorts. We were not able to replicate any of these interaction term in the AGES, ARIC, CHS, ERF, FHS and NFBC-66 cohorts (Ntotal = 30,011) when adjusting for multiple testing. Our GWIS resulted in the consistent finding of a possible interaction between rs774801 in ARMC8 (ENSG00000114098) and rs12442098 in SPATA8 (ENSG00000185594) being associated with HDL levels. However, p-values do not reach the preset Bonferroni correction of the p-values. Our study suggest that even for highly genetically determined traits such as HDL the sample sizes needed to detect SNP×SNP interactions are large and the 2-step filtering approaches do not yield a solution. Here we present our analysis plan and our reservations concerning GWIS.

%B PLoS One %V 9 %P e109290 %8 2014 %G eng %N 10 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25329471?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0109290 %0 Journal Article %J Stroke %D 2014 %T Effect of genetic variants associated with plasma homocysteine levels on stroke risk. %A Cotlarciuc, Ioana %A Malik, Rainer %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Ahmadi, Kourosh R %A Paré, Guillaume %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Fornage, Myriam %A Hasan, Nazeeha %A Rinne, Paul E %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Markus, Hugh S %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Kittner, Steven J %A Meschia, James F %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Dichgans, Martin %A Sharma, Pankaj %K Brain Ischemia %K Cohort Studies %K Europe %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genetic Variation %K Genome %K Homocysteine %K Humans %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk %K Stroke %X

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Elevated total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) levels are known to be associated with increased risk of ischemic stroke (IS). Given that both tHcy and IS are heritable traits, we investigated a potential genetic relationship between homocysteine levels and stroke risk by assessing 18 polymorphisms previously associated with tHcy levels for their association with IS and its subtypes.

METHODS: Previous meta-analysis results from an international stroke collaborative network, METASTROKE, were used to assess association of the 18 tHcy-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 12 389 IS cases and 62 004 controls. We also investigated the associations in regions located within 50 kb from the 18 tHcy-related SNPs and the association of a genetic risk score, including the 18 SNPs.

RESULTS: One SNP located in the RASIP1 gene and a cluster of 3 SNPs located at and near SLC17A3 were significantly associated with IS (P<0.0003) after correcting for multiple testing. For stroke subtypes, the sentinel SNP located upstream of MUT was significantly associated with small-vessel disease (P=0.0022), whereas 1 SNP located in MTHFR was significantly associated with large-vessel disease (P=0.00019). A genetic risk score, including the 18 SNPs, did not show significant association with IS or its subtypes.

CONCLUSIONS: This study found several potential associations with IS and its subtypes: an association of an MUT variant with small-vessel disease, an MTHFR variant with large-vessel disease, and associations of RASIP1 and SLC17A3 variants with overall IS.

%B Stroke %V 45 %P 1920-4 %8 2014 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24846872?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.005208 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2014 %T Effects of long-term averaging of quantitative blood pressure traits on the detection of genetic associations. %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Larson, Martin G %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Verwoert, Germain %A Bis, Joshua C %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Smith, Albert V %A Yang, Min-Lee %A Zhang, Yan %A Ehret, Georg %A Rose, Lynda M %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Papanicolau, George J %A Sijbrands, Eric J %A Rice, Kenneth %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Pihur, Vasyl %A Ridker, Paul M %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Amin, Najaf %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Liu, Kiang %A Launer, Lenore J %A Xu, Ming %A Caulfield, Mark %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Li, Guo %A Bouchard, Claude %A Harris, Tamara B %A Zhang, He %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Siscovick, David S %A Gao, Wei %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A Willer, Cristen J %A Franco, Oscar H %A Huo, Yong %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Palmas, Walter %A van Duijn, Cornelia %A Fornage, Myriam %A Levy, Daniel %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %K Blood Pressure %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Longitudinal Studies %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %X

Blood pressure (BP) is a heritable, quantitative trait with intraindividual variability and susceptibility to measurement error. Genetic studies of BP generally use single-visit measurements and thus cannot remove variability occurring over months or years. We leveraged the idea that averaging BP measured across time would improve phenotypic accuracy and thereby increase statistical power to detect genetic associations. We studied systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and pulse pressure (PP) averaged over multiple years in 46,629 individuals of European ancestry. We identified 39 trait-variant associations across 19 independent loci (p < 5 × 10(-8)); five associations (in four loci) uniquely identified by our LTA analyses included those of SBP and MAP at 2p23 (rs1275988, near KCNK3), DBP at 2q11.2 (rs7599598, in FER1L5), and PP at 6p21 (rs10948071, near CRIP3) and 7p13 (rs2949837, near IGFBP3). Replication analyses conducted in cohorts with single-visit BP data showed positive replication of associations and a nominal association (p < 0.05). We estimated a 20% gain in statistical power with long-term average (LTA) as compared to single-visit BP association studies. Using LTA analysis, we identified genetic loci influencing BP. LTA might be one way of increasing the power of genetic associations for continuous traits in extant samples for other phenotypes that are measured serially over time.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 95 %P 49-65 %8 2014 Jul 03 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24975945?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.06.002 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2014 %T FTO genetic variants, dietary intake and body mass index: insights from 177,330 individuals. %A Qi, Qibin %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Downer, Mary K %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Smith, Caren E %A Sluijs, Ivonne %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Renstrom, Frida %A Lin, Xiaochen %A Ängquist, Lars H %A Huang, Jinyan %A Liu, Zhonghua %A Li, Yanping %A Asif Ali, Muhammad %A Xu, Min %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh %A Boer, Jolanda M A %A Chen, Peng %A Daimon, Makoto %A Eriksson, Johan %A Perola, Markus %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gao, Yu-Tang %A Heppe, Denise H M %A Holloway, John W %A Houston, Denise K %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Kim, Yu-Mi %A Laaksonen, Maarit A %A Jääskeläinen, Tiina %A Lee, Nanette R %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Lu, Wei %A Luben, Robert N %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Männistö, Satu %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Monda, Keri L %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Perusse, Louis %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Xiang, Yong-Bing %A Wen, Wanqing %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Zhu, Jingwen %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Bouchard, Claude %A Cai, Qiuyin %A Cooper, Cyrus %A Dedoussis, George V %A Deloukas, Panos %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Hansen, Torben %A Christiansen, Lene %A Hofman, Albert %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Karasawa, Shigeru %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kim, Mi-Kyung %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Li, Huaixing %A Lin, Xu %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Long, Jirong %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A North, Kari %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Raitakari, Olli %A Rissanen, Harri %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A van der Schouw, Yvonne T %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Franco, Oscar H %A Shyong Tai, E %A Ou Shu, Xiao %A Siscovick, David S %A Toft, Ulla %A Verschuren, W M Monique %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Zheng, Wei %A Ridker, Paul M %A Kang, Jae H %A Liang, Liming %A Jensen, Majken K %A Curhan, Gary C %A Pasquale, Louis R %A Hunter, David J %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Uusitupa, Matti %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Wang, Tao %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Franks, Paul W %A Sørensen, Thorkild I A %A Hu, Frank B %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A Qi, Lu %K Adult %K African Americans %K Aged %K Alleles %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Body Mass Index %K Dietary Carbohydrates %K Dietary Fats %K Dietary Proteins %K Energy Intake %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Gene Frequency %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Obesity %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proteins %X

FTO is the strongest known genetic susceptibility locus for obesity. Experimental studies in animals suggest the potential roles of FTO in regulating food intake. The interactive relation among FTO variants, dietary intake and body mass index (BMI) is complex and results from previous often small-scale studies in humans are highly inconsistent. We performed large-scale analyses based on data from 177,330 adults (154 439 Whites, 5776 African Americans and 17 115 Asians) from 40 studies to examine: (i) the association between the FTO-rs9939609 variant (or a proxy single-nucleotide polymorphism) and total energy and macronutrient intake and (ii) the interaction between the FTO variant and dietary intake on BMI. The minor allele (A-allele) of the FTO-rs9939609 variant was associated with higher BMI in Whites (effect per allele = 0.34 [0.31, 0.37] kg/m(2), P = 1.9 × 10(-105)), and all participants (0.30 [0.30, 0.35] kg/m(2), P = 3.6 × 10(-107)). The BMI-increasing allele of the FTO variant showed a significant association with higher dietary protein intake (effect per allele = 0.08 [0.06, 0.10] %, P = 2.4 × 10(-16)), and relative weak associations with lower total energy intake (-6.4 [-10.1, -2.6] kcal/day, P = 0.001) and lower dietary carbohydrate intake (-0.07 [-0.11, -0.02] %, P = 0.004). The associations with protein (P = 7.5 × 10(-9)) and total energy (P = 0.002) were attenuated but remained significant after adjustment for BMI. We did not find significant interactions between the FTO variant and dietary intake of total energy, protein, carbohydrate or fat on BMI. Our findings suggest a positive association between the BMI-increasing allele of FTO variant and higher dietary protein intake and offer insight into potential link between FTO, dietary protein intake and adiposity.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 23 %P 6961-72 %8 2014 Dec 20 %G eng %N 25 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25104851?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddu411 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2014 %T Gene-age interactions in blood pressure regulation: a large-scale investigation with the CHARGE, Global BPgen, and ICBP Consortia. %A Simino, Jeannette %A Shi, Gang %A Bis, Joshua C %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Ehret, Georg B %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Sijbrands, Eric %A Smith, Albert V %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A Cadby, Gemma %A Chen, Peng %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Corre, Tanguy %A de Boer, Rudolf A %A Goel, Anuj %A Johnson, Toby %A Khor, Chiea-Chuen %A Lluís-Ganella, Carla %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Sim, Xueling %A Sõber, Siim %A van der Most, Peter J %A Verweij, Niek %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Amin, Najaf %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bouchard, Claude %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Elosua, Roberto %A Franco, Oscar H %A Gieger, Christian %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hercberg, Serge %A Hofman, Albert %A James, Alan L %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Kähönen, Mika %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Larson, Martin G %A Launer, Lenore J %A Li, Guo %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liu, Kiang %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Navis, Gerjan %A Ong, Rick Twee-Hee %A Papanicolau, George J %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rose, Lynda M %A Sanna, Serena %A Scott, Robert A %A Siscovick, David S %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A van der Klauw, Melanie M %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Vithana, Eranga Nishanthie %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Watkins, Hugh %A Young, Terri L %A Aung, Tin %A Bochud, Murielle %A Farrall, Martin %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Laan, Maris %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lucas, Gavin %A Meneton, Pierre %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Rettig, Rainer %A Snieder, Harold %A Tai, E Shyong %A Teo, Yik-Ying %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Fornage, Myriam %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Levy, Daniel %A Palmas, Walter %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Rao, Dabeeru C %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Age Factors %K Aged %K Blood Pressure %K Cohort Studies %K Humans %K Middle Aged %K Young Adult %X

Although age-dependent effects on blood pressure (BP) have been reported, they have not been systematically investigated in large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWASs). We leveraged the infrastructure of three well-established consortia (CHARGE, GBPgen, and ICBP) and a nonstandard approach (age stratification and metaregression) to conduct a genome-wide search of common variants with age-dependent effects on systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP), mean arterial (MAP), and pulse (PP) pressure. In a two-staged design using 99,241 individuals of European ancestry, we identified 20 genome-wide significant (p ≤ 5 × 10(-8)) loci by using joint tests of the SNP main effect and SNP-age interaction. Nine of the significant loci demonstrated nominal evidence of age-dependent effects on BP by tests of the interactions alone. Index SNPs in the EHBP1L1 (DBP and MAP), CASZ1 (SBP and MAP), and GOSR2 (PP) loci exhibited the largest age interactions, with opposite directions of effect in the young versus the old. The changes in the genetic effects over time were small but nonnegligible (up to 1.58 mm Hg over 60 years). The EHBP1L1 locus was discovered through gene-age interactions only in whites but had DBP main effects replicated (p = 8.3 × 10(-4)) in 8,682 Asians from Singapore, indicating potential interethnic heterogeneity. A secondary analysis revealed 22 loci with evidence of age-specific effects (e.g., only in 20 to 29-year-olds). Age can be used to select samples with larger genetic effect sizes and more homogenous phenotypes, which may increase statistical power. Age-dependent effects identified through novel statistical approaches can provide insight into the biology and temporal regulation underlying BP associations.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 95 %P 24-38 %8 2014 Jul 03 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24954895?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.05.010 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2014 %T Genetic association study of QT interval highlights role for calcium signaling pathways in myocardial repolarization. %A Arking, Dan E %A Pulit, Sara L %A Crotti, Lia %A van der Harst, Pim %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Koopmann, Tamara T %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Rossin, Elizabeth J %A Morley, Michael %A Wang, Xinchen %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Lundby, Alicia %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Noseworthy, Peter A %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Bradford, Yuki %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Dörr, Marcus %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Lahtinen, Annukka M %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Bis, Joshua C %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Newhouse, Stephen J %A Evans, Daniel S %A Post, Wendy S %A Waggott, Daryl %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Eisele, Lewin %A Ellinghaus, David %A Hayward, Caroline %A Navarro, Pau %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Tester, David J %A Chatel, Stéphanie %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Kumari, Meena %A Morris, Richard W %A Naluai, Åsa T %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Kluttig, Alexander %A Strohmer, Bernhard %A Panayiotou, Andrie G %A Torres, Maria %A Knoflach, Michael %A Hubacek, Jaroslav A %A Slowikowski, Kamil %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A Kumar, Runjun D %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Bader, Joel S %A Ehret, Georg %A Huang, Hailiang %A Kao, W H Linda %A Strait, James B %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Brown, Morris %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Willeit, Johann %A Smith, J Gustav %A Greiser, Karin H %A Meyer Zu Schwabedissen, Henriette %A Werdan, Karl %A Carella, Massimo %A Zelante, Leopoldo %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Polasek, Ozren %A Wright, Alan F %A Griffin, Maura %A Daly, Mark J %A Arnar, David O %A Holm, Hilma %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Denny, Joshua C %A Roden, Dan M %A Zuvich, Rebecca L %A Emilsson, Valur %A Plump, Andrew S %A Larson, Martin G %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Yin, Xiaoyan %A Bobbo, Marco %A D'Adamo, Adamo P %A Iorio, Annamaria %A Sinagra, Gianfranco %A Carracedo, Angel %A Cummings, Steven R %A Nalls, Michael A %A Jula, Antti %A Kontula, Kimmo K %A Marjamaa, Annukka %A Oikarinen, Lasse %A Perola, Markus %A Porthan, Kimmo %A Erbel, Raimund %A Hoffmann, Per %A Jöckel, Karl-Heinz %A Kälsch, Hagen %A Nöthen, Markus M %A den Hoed, Marcel %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Thelle, Dag S %A Gieger, Christian %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Perz, Siegfried %A Peters, Annette %A Prucha, Hanna %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A de Boer, Rudolf A %A Franke, Lude %A van der Vleuten, Pieter A %A Beckmann, Britt Maria %A Martens, Eimo %A Bardai, Abdennasser %A Hofman, Nynke %A Wilde, Arthur A M %A Behr, Elijah R %A Dalageorgou, Chrysoula %A Giudicessi, John R %A Medeiros-Domingo, Argelia %A Barc, Julien %A Kyndt, Florence %A Probst, Vincent %A Ghidoni, Alice %A Insolia, Roberto %A Hamilton, Robert M %A Scherer, Stephen W %A Brandimarto, Jeffrey %A Margulies, Kenneth %A Moravec, Christine E %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Lee, Wai K %A Watt, Graham C M %A Campbell, Harry %A Wild, Sarah H %A El Mokhtari, Nour E %A Frey, Norbert %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Navis, Gerjan %A van den Berg, Maarten P %A van Veldhuisen, Dirk J %A Kellis, Manolis %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Franco, Oscar H %A Hofman, Albert %A Kors, Jan A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Kedenko, Lyudmyla %A Lamina, Claudia %A Oostra, Ben A %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Mulas, Antonella %A Orrù, Marco %A Schlessinger, David %A Uda, Manuela %A Markus, Marcello R P %A Völker, Uwe %A Snieder, Harold %A Spector, Timothy D %A Arnlöv, Johan %A Lind, Lars %A Sundström, Johan %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kähönen, Mika %A Mononen, Nina %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Viikari, Jorma S %A Adamkova, Vera %A Kiechl, Stefan %A Brion, Maria %A Nicolaides, Andrew N %A Paulweber, Bernhard %A Haerting, Johannes %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Nyberg, Fredrik %A Whincup, Peter H %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Schott, Jean-Jacques %A Bezzina, Connie R %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Wilson, James F %A Rudan, Igor %A Franke, Andre %A Mühleisen, Thomas W %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Lehtimäki, Terho J %A Paterson, Andrew D %A Parsa, Afshin %A Liu, Yongmei %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Siscovick, David S %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Felix, Stephan B %A Sanna, Serena %A Ritchie, Marylyn D %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Stefansson, Kari %A Boyer, Laurie A %A Cappola, Thomas P %A Olsen, Jesper V %A Lage, Kasper %A Schwartz, Peter J %A Kääb, Stefan %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Ackerman, Michael J %A Pfeufer, Arne %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %K Adult %K Aged %K Arrhythmias, Cardiac %K Calcium Signaling %K Death, Sudden, Cardiac %K Electrocardiography %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Heart Ventricles %K Humans %K Long QT Syndrome %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Myocardium %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

The QT interval, an electrocardiographic measure reflecting myocardial repolarization, is a heritable trait. QT prolongation is a risk factor for ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death (SCD) and could indicate the presence of the potentially lethal mendelian long-QT syndrome (LQTS). Using a genome-wide association and replication study in up to 100,000 individuals, we identified 35 common variant loci associated with QT interval that collectively explain ∼8-10% of QT-interval variation and highlight the importance of calcium regulation in myocardial repolarization. Rare variant analysis of 6 new QT interval-associated loci in 298 unrelated probands with LQTS identified coding variants not found in controls but of uncertain causality and therefore requiring validation. Several newly identified loci encode proteins that physically interact with other recognized repolarization proteins. Our integration of common variant association, expression and orthogonal protein-protein interaction screens provides new insights into cardiac electrophysiology and identifies new candidate genes for ventricular arrhythmias, LQTS and SCD.

%B Nat Genet %V 46 %P 826-36 %8 2014 Aug %G eng %N 8 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24952745?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.3014 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2014 %T Genome-wide association analysis identifies six new loci associated with forced vital capacity. %A Loth, Daan W %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Gharib, Sina A %A Wain, Louise V %A Franceschini, Nora %A Koch, Beate %A Pottinger, Tess D %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Duan, Qing %A Oldmeadow, Chris %A Lee, Mi Kyeong %A Strachan, David P %A James, Alan L %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Vitart, Veronique %A Ramasamy, Adaikalavan %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Wang, Xin-Qun %A Trochet, Holly %A Kähönen, Mika %A Flexeder, Claudia %A Albrecht, Eva %A Lopez, Lorna M %A de Jong, Kim %A Thyagarajan, Bharat %A Alves, Alexessander Couto %A Enroth, Stefan %A Omenaas, Ernst %A Joshi, Peter K %A Fall, Tove %A Viñuela, Ana %A Launer, Lenore J %A Loehr, Laura R %A Fornage, Myriam %A Li, Guo %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Tang, Wenbo %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Lahousse, Lies %A Harris, Tamara B %A North, Kari E %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Hui, Jennie %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Lumley, Thomas %A Wright, Alan F %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Campbell, Susan %A Kumar, Rajesh %A Pin, Isabelle %A Scott, Robert A %A Pietiläinen, Kirsi H %A Surakka, Ida %A Liu, Yongmei %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Schulz, Holger %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Davies, Gail %A Vonk, Judith M %A Wojczynski, Mary %A Pouta, Anneli %A Johansson, Asa %A Wild, Sarah H %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Völzke, Henry %A Hysi, Pirro G %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Gao, Wei %A Postma, Dirkje S %A White, Wendy B %A Rich, Stephen S %A Hofman, Albert %A Aspelund, Thor %A Couper, David %A Smith, Lewis J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Lohman, Kurt %A Burchard, Esteban G %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Garcia, Melissa %A Joubert, Bonnie R %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Musk, A Bill %A Hansel, Nadia %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Zgaga, Lina %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Navarro, Pau %A Rudan, Igor %A Oh, Yeon-Mok %A Redline, Susan %A Jarvis, Deborah L %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Rantanen, Taina %A O'Connor, George T %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Scott, Rodney J %A Karrasch, Stefan %A Grallert, Harald %A Gaddis, Nathan C %A Starr, John M %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Minster, Ryan L %A Lederer, David J %A Pekkanen, Juha %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Campbell, Harry %A Morris, Andrew P %A Gläser, Sven %A Hammond, Christopher J %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Beilby, John %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hancock, Dana B %A Williams, O Dale %A Polasek, Ozren %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Petrini, Marcy F %A Wjst, Matthias %A Kim, Woo Jin %A Porteous, David J %A Scotland, Generation %A Smith, Blair H %A Viljanen, Anne %A Heliövaara, Markku %A Attia, John R %A Sayers, Ian %A Hampel, Regina %A Gieger, Christian %A Deary, Ian J %A Boezen, H Marike %A Newman, Anne %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Wilson, James F %A Lind, Lars %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Teumer, Alexander %A Spector, Timothy D %A Melén, Erik %A Peters, Marjolein J %A Lange, Leslie A %A Barr, R Graham %A Bracke, Ken R %A Verhamme, Fien M %A Sung, Joohon %A Hiemstra, Pieter S %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Sood, Akshay %A Hayward, Caroline %A Dupuis, Josée %A Hall, Ian P %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Tobin, Martin D %A London, Stephanie J %K Cohort Studies %K Databases, Genetic %K Follow-Up Studies %K Forced Expiratory Volume %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Lung Diseases %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prognosis %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Respiratory Function Tests %K Spirometry %K Vital Capacity %X

Forced vital capacity (FVC), a spirometric measure of pulmonary function, reflects lung volume and is used to diagnose and monitor lung diseases. We performed genome-wide association study meta-analysis of FVC in 52,253 individuals from 26 studies and followed up the top associations in 32,917 additional individuals of European ancestry. We found six new regions associated at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10(-8)) with FVC in or near EFEMP1, BMP6, MIR129-2-HSD17B12, PRDM11, WWOX and KCNJ2. Two loci previously associated with spirometric measures (GSTCD and PTCH1) were related to FVC. Newly implicated regions were followed up in samples from African-American, Korean, Chinese and Hispanic individuals. We detected transcripts for all six newly implicated genes in human lung tissue. The new loci may inform mechanisms involved in lung development and the pathogenesis of restrictive lung disease.

%B Nat Genet %V 46 %P 669-77 %8 2014 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24929828?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ng.3011 %0 Journal Article %J Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol %D 2014 %T Genome-wide association study for circulating tissue plasminogen activator levels and functional follow-up implicates endothelial STXBP5 and STX2. %A Huang, Jie %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Yamakuchi, Munekazu %A Yamkauchi, Munekazu %A Trompet, Stella %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Chen, Wei-Min %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Shin, So-Youn %A Becker, Diane M %A Tang, Weihong %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Truong, Vinh %A Folkersen, Lasse %A Yang, Qiong %A Oudot-Mellkah, Tiphaine %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Moore, Jason H %A Williams, Frances M K %A Campbell, Harry %A Silbernagel, Günther %A Vitart, Veronique %A Rudan, Igor %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Navis, Gerjan J %A DeStefano, Anita %A Wright, Alan F %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Rumley, Ann %A Bookman, Ebony B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Chen, Fang %A Keene, Keith L %A Franco, Oscar H %A Böhm, Bernhard O %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Carter, Angela M %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Sattar, Naveed %A Bis, Joshua C %A Ikram, Mohammad A %A Sale, Michèle M %A McKnight, Barbara %A Fornage, Myriam %A Ford, Ian %A Taylor, Kent %A Slagboom, P Eline %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Franco-Cereceda, Anders %A Goodall, Alison H %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Furie, Karen L %A Cushman, Mary %A Hofman, Albert %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Basu, Saonli %A Matijevic, Nena %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Wilson, James F %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Reilly, Muredach P %A Tracy, Russell P %A Polasek, Ozren %A Winkelmann, Bernhard R %A Grant, Peter J %A Hillege, Hans L %A Cambien, Francois %A Stott, David J %A Lowe, Gordon D %A Spector, Timothy D %A Meigs, James B %A März, Winfried %A Eriksson, Per %A Becker, Lewis C %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Williams, Scott M %A Hayward, Caroline %A van der Harst, Pim %A Hamsten, Anders %A Lowenstein, Charles J %A Strachan, David P %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K Aged %K Cells, Cultured %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Endothelial Cells %K Europe %K Female %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Gene Silencing %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K R-SNARE Proteins %K Risk Factors %K Stroke %K Syntaxin 1 %K Tissue Plasminogen Activator %K Transfection %K United States %K Up-Regulation %X

OBJECTIVE: Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), a serine protease, catalyzes the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, the major enzyme responsible for endogenous fibrinolysis. In some populations, elevated plasma levels of tPA have been associated with myocardial infarction and other cardiovascular diseases. We conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies to identify novel correlates of circulating levels of tPA.

APPROACH AND RESULTS: Fourteen cohort studies with tPA measures (N=26 929) contributed to the meta-analysis. Three loci were significantly associated with circulating tPA levels (P<5.0×10(-8)). The first locus is on 6q24.3, with the lead single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; rs9399599; P=2.9×10(-14)) within STXBP5. The second locus is on 8p11.21. The lead SNP (rs3136739; P=1.3×10(-9)) is intronic to POLB and <200 kb away from the tPA encoding the gene PLAT. We identified a nonsynonymous SNP (rs2020921) in modest linkage disequilibrium with rs3136739 (r(2)=0.50) within exon 5 of PLAT (P=2.0×10(-8)). The third locus is on 12q24.33, with the lead SNP (rs7301826; P=1.0×10(-9)) within intron 7 of STX2. We further found evidence for the association of lead SNPs in STXBP5 and STX2 with expression levels of the respective transcripts. In in vitro cell studies, silencing STXBP5 decreased the release of tPA from vascular endothelial cells, whereas silencing STX2 increased the tPA release. Through an in silico lookup, we found no associations of the 3 lead SNPs with coronary artery disease or stroke.

CONCLUSIONS: We identified 3 loci associated with circulating tPA levels, the PLAT region, STXBP5, and STX2. Our functional studies implicate a novel role for STXBP5 and STX2 in regulating tPA release.

%B Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol %V 34 %P 1093-101 %8 2014 May %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24578379?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/ATVBAHA.113.302088 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2014 %T Identification of novel genetic Loci associated with thyroid peroxidase antibodies and clinical thyroid disease. %A Medici, Marco %A Porcu, Eleonora %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Teumer, Alexander %A Brown, Suzanne J %A Jensen, Richard A %A Rawal, Rajesh %A Roef, Greet L %A Plantinga, Theo S %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Lahti, Jari %A Simmonds, Matthew J %A Husemoen, Lise Lotte N %A Freathy, Rachel M %A Shields, Beverley M %A Pietzner, Diana %A Nagy, Rebecca %A Broer, Linda %A Chaker, Layal %A Korevaar, Tim I M %A Plia, Maria Grazia %A Sala, Cinzia %A Völker, Uwe %A Richards, J Brent %A Sweep, Fred C %A Gieger, Christian %A Corre, Tanguy %A Kajantie, Eero %A Thuesen, Betina %A Taes, Youri E %A Visser, W Edward %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Kratzsch, Jürgen %A Hamilton, Alexander %A Li, Wei %A Homuth, Georg %A Lobina, Monia %A Mariotti, Stefano %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Nauck, Matthias %A Spielhagen, Christin %A Ross, Alec %A Arnold, Alice %A van de Bunt, Martijn %A Liyanarachchi, Sandya %A Heier, Margit %A Grabe, Hans Jörgen %A Masciullo, Corrado %A Galesloot, Tessel E %A Lim, Ee M %A Reischl, Eva %A Leedman, Peter J %A Lai, Sandra %A Delitala, Alessandro %A Bremner, Alexandra P %A Philips, David I W %A Beilby, John P %A Mulas, Antonella %A Vocale, Matteo %A Abecasis, Goncalo %A Forsen, Tom %A James, Alan %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Hui, Jennie %A Prokisch, Holger %A Rietzschel, Ernst E %A Palotie, Aarno %A Feddema, Peter %A Fletcher, Stephen J %A Schramm, Katharina %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kluttig, Alexander %A Radke, Dörte %A Traglia, Michela %A Surdulescu, Gabriela L %A He, Huiling %A Franklyn, Jayne A %A Tiller, Daniel %A Vaidya, Bijay %A De Meyer, Tim %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Eriksson, Johan G %A O'Leary, Peter C %A Wichmann, Eric %A Hermus, Ad R %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ittermann, Till %A Hofman, Albert %A Bosi, Emanuele %A Schlessinger, David %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A de la Chapelle, Albert %A Netea-Maier, Romana T %A Gough, Stephen C L %A Meyer Zu Schwabedissen, Henriette %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Kaufman, Jean-Marc %A Linneberg, Allan %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Smit, Johannes W A %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Walsh, John P %A Meisinger, Christa %A den Heijer, Martin %A Visser, Theo J %A Spector, Timothy D %A Wilson, Scott G %A Völzke, Henry %A Cappola, Anne %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Sanna, Serena %A Naitza, Silvia %A Peeters, Robin P %K Autoantibodies %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Graves Disease %K Hashimoto Disease %K Humans %K Iodide Peroxidase %K Risk Factors %K Thyroiditis, Autoimmune %K Thyrotropin %X

Autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITD) are common, affecting 2-5% of the general population. Individuals with positive thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAbs) have an increased risk of autoimmune hypothyroidism (Hashimoto's thyroiditis), as well as autoimmune hyperthyroidism (Graves' disease). As the possible causative genes of TPOAbs and AITD remain largely unknown, we performed GWAS meta-analyses in 18,297 individuals for TPOAb-positivity (1769 TPOAb-positives and 16,528 TPOAb-negatives) and in 12,353 individuals for TPOAb serum levels, with replication in 8,990 individuals. Significant associations (P<5×10(-8)) were detected at TPO-rs11675434, ATXN2-rs653178, and BACH2-rs10944479 for TPOAb-positivity, and at TPO-rs11675434, MAGI3-rs1230666, and KALRN-rs2010099 for TPOAb levels. Individual and combined effects (genetic risk scores) of these variants on (subclinical) hypo- and hyperthyroidism, goiter and thyroid cancer were studied. Individuals with a high genetic risk score had, besides an increased risk of TPOAb-positivity (OR: 2.18, 95% CI 1.68-2.81, P = 8.1×10(-8)), a higher risk of increased thyroid-stimulating hormone levels (OR: 1.51, 95% CI 1.26-1.82, P = 2.9×10(-6)), as well as a decreased risk of goiter (OR: 0.77, 95% CI 0.66-0.89, P = 6.5×10(-4)). The MAGI3 and BACH2 variants were associated with an increased risk of hyperthyroidism, which was replicated in an independent cohort of patients with Graves' disease (OR: 1.37, 95% CI 1.22-1.54, P = 1.2×10(-7) and OR: 1.25, 95% CI 1.12-1.39, P = 6.2×10(-5)). The MAGI3 variant was also associated with an increased risk of hypothyroidism (OR: 1.57, 95% CI 1.18-2.10, P = 1.9×10(-3)). This first GWAS meta-analysis for TPOAbs identified five newly associated loci, three of which were also associated with clinical thyroid disease. With these markers we identified a large subgroup in the general population with a substantially increased risk of TPOAbs. The results provide insight into why individuals with thyroid autoimmunity do or do not eventually develop thyroid disease, and these markers may therefore predict which TPOAb-positives are particularly at risk of developing clinical thyroid dysfunction.

%B PLoS Genet %V 10 %P e1004123 %8 2014 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586183?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004123 %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2014 %T Integrating genetic, transcriptional, and functional analyses to identify 5 novel genes for atrial fibrillation. %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Tucker, Nathan R %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Ozaki, Kouichi %A Smith, J Gustav %A Trompet, Stella %A Bis, Joshua C %A Lin, Honghuang %A Chung, Mina K %A Nielsen, Jonas B %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Magnani, Jared W %A Ye, Jiangchuan %A Gollob, Michael H %A Tsunoda, Tatsuhiko %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Lichtner, Peter %A Peters, Annette %A Dolmatova, Elena %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Albert, Christine M %A Ebana, Yusuke %A Furukawa, Tetsushi %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Harris, Tamara B %A Darbar, Dawood %A Dörr, Marcus %A Holst, Anders G %A Svendsen, Jesper H %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Isobe, Mitsuaki %A Malik, Rainer %A Dichgans, Martin %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Milan, David J %A Melander, Olle %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Ford, Ian %A Liu, Yongmei %A Barnard, John %A Olesen, Morten S %A Stricker, Bruno H C %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Kääb, Stefan %A Ellinor, Patrick T %K Aged %K Animals %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Chromosome Mapping %K Connexin 43 %K Europe %K Female %K Gene Knockdown Techniques %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genotype %K Homeodomain Proteins %K Humans %K Japan %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Muscle Proteins %K Nuclear Proteins %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Repressor Proteins %K T-Box Domain Proteins %K Transcription Factors %K Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases %K Zebrafish %K Zebrafish Proteins %X

BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) affects >30 million individuals worldwide and is associated with an increased risk of stroke, heart failure, and death. AF is highly heritable, yet the genetic basis for the arrhythmia remains incompletely understood.

METHODS AND RESULTS: To identify new AF-related genes, we used a multifaceted approach, combining large-scale genotyping in 2 ethnically distinct populations, cis-eQTL (expression quantitative trait loci) mapping, and functional validation. Four novel loci were identified in individuals of European descent near the genes NEURL (rs12415501; relative risk [RR]=1.18; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.13-1.23; P=6.5×10(-16)), GJA1 (rs13216675; RR=1.10; 95% CI, 1.06-1.14; P=2.2×10(-8)), TBX5 (rs10507248; RR=1.12; 95% CI, 1.08-1.16; P=5.7×10(-11)), and CAND2 (rs4642101; RR=1.10; 95% CI, 1.06-1.14; P=9.8×10(-9)). In Japanese, novel loci were identified near NEURL (rs6584555; RR=1.32; 95% CI, 1.26-1.39; P=2.0×10(-25)) and CUX2 (rs6490029; RR=1.12; 95% CI, 1.08-1.16; P=3.9×10(-9)). The top single-nucleotide polymorphisms or their proxies were identified as cis-eQTLs for the genes CAND2 (P=2.6×10(-19)), GJA1 (P=2.66×10(-6)), and TBX5 (P=1.36×10(-5)). Knockdown of the zebrafish orthologs of NEURL and CAND2 resulted in prolongation of the atrial action potential duration (17% and 45%, respectively).

CONCLUSIONS: We have identified 5 novel loci for AF. Our results expand the diversity of genetic pathways implicated in AF and provide novel molecular targets for future biological and pharmacological investigation.

%B Circulation %V 130 %P 1225-35 %8 2014 Oct 7 %G eng %N 15 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25124494?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.114.009892 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2014 %T Large-scale genome-wide association studies and meta-analyses of longitudinal change in adult lung function. %A Tang, Wenbo %A Kowgier, Matthew %A Loth, Daan W %A Soler Artigas, Maria %A Joubert, Bonnie R %A Hodge, Emily %A Gharib, Sina A %A Smith, Albert V %A Ruczinski, Ingo %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hansel, Nadia N %A Launer, Lenore J %A Barnes, Kathleen C %A Hansen, Joyanna G %A Albrecht, Eva %A Aldrich, Melinda C %A Allerhand, Michael %A Barr, R Graham %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Couper, David J %A Curjuric, Ivan %A Davies, Gail %A Deary, Ian J %A Dupuis, Josée %A Fall, Tove %A Foy, Millennia %A Franceschini, Nora %A Gao, Wei %A Gläser, Sven %A Gu, Xiangjun %A Hancock, Dana B %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Hofman, Albert %A Imboden, Medea %A Ingelsson, Erik %A James, Alan %A Karrasch, Stefan %A Koch, Beate %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Kumar, Ashish %A Lahousse, Lies %A Li, Guo %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lohman, Kurt %A Lumley, Thomas %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Meibohm, Bernd %A Morris, Andrew P %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Musk, Bill %A North, Kari E %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schulz, Holger %A Smith, Lewis J %A Sood, Akshay %A Starr, John M %A Strachan, David P %A Teumer, Alexander %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völzke, Henry %A Voorman, Arend %A Wain, Louise V %A Wells, Martin T %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Williams, O Dale %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Stricker, Bruno H %A London, Stephanie J %A Fornage, Myriam %A Tobin, Martin D %A O'Connor, George T %A Hall, Ian P %A Cassano, Patricia A %K Adult %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 11 %K Female %K Gene Expression Regulation %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Longitudinal Studies %K Male %K Respiration %X

BACKGROUND: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified numerous loci influencing cross-sectional lung function, but less is known about genes influencing longitudinal change in lung function.

METHODS: We performed GWAS of the rate of change in forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) in 14 longitudinal, population-based cohort studies comprising 27,249 adults of European ancestry using linear mixed effects model and combined cohort-specific results using fixed effect meta-analysis to identify novel genetic loci associated with longitudinal change in lung function. Gene expression analyses were subsequently performed for identified genetic loci. As a secondary aim, we estimated the mean rate of decline in FEV1 by smoking pattern, irrespective of genotypes, across these 14 studies using meta-analysis.

RESULTS: The overall meta-analysis produced suggestive evidence for association at the novel IL16/STARD5/TMC3 locus on chromosome 15 (P  =  5.71 × 10(-7)). In addition, meta-analysis using the five cohorts with ≥3 FEV1 measurements per participant identified the novel ME3 locus on chromosome 11 (P  =  2.18 × 10(-8)) at genome-wide significance. Neither locus was associated with FEV1 decline in two additional cohort studies. We confirmed gene expression of IL16, STARD5, and ME3 in multiple lung tissues. Publicly available microarray data confirmed differential expression of all three genes in lung samples from COPD patients compared with controls. Irrespective of genotypes, the combined estimate for FEV1 decline was 26.9, 29.2 and 35.7 mL/year in never, former, and persistent smokers, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: In this large-scale GWAS, we identified two novel genetic loci in association with the rate of change in FEV1 that harbor candidate genes with biologically plausible functional links to lung function.

%B PLoS One %V 9 %P e100776 %8 2014 %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24983941?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0100776 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2014 %T No evidence for genome-wide interactions on plasma fibrinogen by smoking, alcohol consumption and body mass index: results from meta-analyses of 80,607 subjects. %A Baumert, Jens %A Huang, Jie %A McKnight, Barbara %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Steri, Maristella %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Trompet, Stella %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Fornage, Myriam %A Teumer, Alexander %A Tang, Weihong %A Rudnicka, Alicja R %A Mälarstig, Anders %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Lahti, Jari %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Hayward, Caroline %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Rose, Lynda M %A Basu, Saonli %A Rumley, Ann %A Stott, David J %A Buckley, Brendan M %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Sanna, Serena %A Masala, Marco %A Biffar, Reiner %A Homuth, Georg %A Silveira, Angela %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Goel, Anuj %A Watkins, Hugh %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Rückerl, Regina %A Taylor, Kent %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Hofman, Albert %A Witteman, Jacqueline C M %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Palotie, Aarno %A Davies, Gail %A Siscovick, David S %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Wild, Sarah H %A Song, Jaejoon %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Ford, Ian %A Sattar, Naveed %A Schlessinger, David %A Grotevendt, Anne %A Franzosi, Maria Grazia %A Illig, Thomas %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Lumley, Thomas %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Lowe, Gordon D %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Cucca, Francesco %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Seedorf, Udo %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Bis, Joshua C %A Mukamal, Kenneth J %A van Dongen, Jenny %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Franco, Oscar H %A Starr, John M %A Liu, Kiang %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Polasek, Ozren %A Wilson, James F %A Oudot-Mellakh, Tiphaine %A Campbell, Harry %A Navarro, Pau %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Eriksson, Johan %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Clarke, Robert %A Hamsten, Anders %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Naitza, Silvia %A Ridker, Paul M %A Völzke, Henry %A Deary, Ian J %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Strachan, David P %A Peters, Annette %A Smith, Nicholas L %K Alcohol Drinking %K Body Mass Index %K Fibrinogen %K Gene-Environment Interaction %K Genomics %K Humans %K Smoking %X

Plasma fibrinogen is an acute phase protein playing an important role in the blood coagulation cascade having strong associations with smoking, alcohol consumption and body mass index (BMI). Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a variety of gene regions associated with elevated plasma fibrinogen concentrations. However, little is yet known about how associations between environmental factors and fibrinogen might be modified by genetic variation. Therefore, we conducted large-scale meta-analyses of genome-wide interaction studies to identify possible interactions of genetic variants and smoking status, alcohol consumption or BMI on fibrinogen concentration. The present study included 80,607 subjects of European ancestry from 22 studies. Genome-wide interaction analyses were performed separately in each study for about 2.6 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the 22 autosomal chromosomes. For each SNP and risk factor, we performed a linear regression under an additive genetic model including an interaction term between SNP and risk factor. Interaction estimates were meta-analysed using a fixed-effects model. No genome-wide significant interaction with smoking status, alcohol consumption or BMI was observed in the meta-analyses. The most suggestive interaction was found for smoking and rs10519203, located in the LOC123688 region on chromosome 15, with a p value of 6.2 × 10(-8). This large genome-wide interaction study including 80,607 participants found no strong evidence of interaction between genetic variants and smoking status, alcohol consumption or BMI on fibrinogen concentrations. Further studies are needed to yield deeper insight in the interplay between environmental factors and gene variants on the regulation of fibrinogen concentrations.

%B PLoS One %V 9 %P e111156 %8 2014 %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25551457?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0111156 %0 Journal Article %J J Am Coll Cardiol %D 2014 %T Novel genetic markers associate with atrial fibrillation risk in Europeans and Japanese. %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Lin, Honghuang %A Arking, Dan E %A Trompet, Stella %A Li, Guo %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Barnard, John %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Dörr, Marcus %A Ozaki, Kouichi %A Smith, Albert V %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Walter, Stefan %A Agarwal, Sunil K %A Bis, Joshua C %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Lin Y %A Everett, Brendan M %A Ford, Ian %A Franco, Oscar H %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofman, Albert %A Kääb, Stefan %A Mahida, Saagar %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Launer, Lenore J %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Magnani, Jared W %A McKnight, Barbara %A McManus, David D %A Peters, Annette %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Silbernagel, Guenther %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stott, David J %A Taylor, Kent D %A Tomaschitz, Andreas %A Tsunoda, Tatsuhiko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Felix, Stephan B %A März, Winfried %A Chung, Mina %A Albert, Christine M %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Ellinor, Patrick T %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Atrial Fibrillation %K Chromosome Mapping %K Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4 %K Europe %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Markers %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Homeodomain Proteins %K Humans %K Japan %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Transcription Factors %X

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to identify nonredundant atrial fibrillation (AF) genetic susceptibility signals and examine their cumulative relations with AF risk.

BACKGROUND: AF-associated loci span broad genomic regions that may contain multiple susceptibility signals. Whether multiple signals exist at AF loci has not been systematically explored.

METHODS: We performed association testing conditioned on the most significant, independently associated genetic markers at 9 established AF loci using 2 complementary techniques in 64,683 individuals of European ancestry (3,869 incident and 3,302 prevalent AF cases). Genetic risk scores were created and tested for association with AF in Europeans and an independent sample of 11,309 individuals of Japanese ancestry (7,916 prevalent AF cases).

RESULTS: We observed at least 4 distinct AF susceptibility signals on chromosome 4q25 upstream of PITX2, but not at the remaining 8 AF loci. A multilocus score comprised 12 genetic markers demonstrated an estimated 5-fold gradient in AF risk. We observed a similar spectrum of risk associated with these markers in Japanese. Regions containing AF signals on chromosome 4q25 displayed a greater degree of evolutionary conservation than the remainder of the locus, suggesting that they may tag regulatory elements.

CONCLUSIONS: The chromosome 4q25 AF locus is architecturally complex and harbors at least 4 AF susceptibility signals in individuals of European ancestry. Similar polygenic AF susceptibility exists between Europeans and Japanese. Future work is necessary to identify causal variants, determine mechanisms by which associated loci predispose to AF, and explore whether AF susceptibility signals classify individuals at risk for AF and related morbidity.

%B J Am Coll Cardiol %V 63 %P 1200-10 %8 2014 Apr 1 %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24486271?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.jacc.2013.12.015 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2014 %T Pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of LDL cholesterol response to statins. %A Postmus, Iris %A Trompet, Stella %A Deshmukh, Harshal A %A Barnes, Michael R %A Li, Xiaohui %A Warren, Helen R %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Zhou, Kaixin %A Arsenault, Benoit J %A Donnelly, Louise A %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Avery, Christy L %A Griffin, Paula %A Feng, QiPing %A Taylor, Kent D %A Li, Guo %A Evans, Daniel S %A Smith, Albert V %A de Keyser, Catherine E %A Johnson, Andrew D %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Stott, David J %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Ford, Ian %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Sattar, Naveed %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Sever, Peter %A Poulter, Neil %A Stanton, Alice %A Shields, Denis C %A O'Brien, Eoin %A Shaw-Hawkins, Sue %A Chen, Y-D Ida %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Smith, Joshua D %A Dubé, Marie Pierre %A Boekholdt, S Matthijs %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Kastelein, John J P %A McKeigue, Paul M %A Betteridge, John %A Neil, Andrew %A Durrington, Paul N %A Doney, Alex %A Carr, Fiona %A Morris, Andrew %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Groop, Leif %A Ahlqvist, Emma %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rice, Kenneth %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Lumley, Thomas %A Whitsel, Eric A %A Stürmer, Til %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Ngwa, Julius S %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Wei, Wei-Qi %A Wilke, Russell A %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Sun, Fangui %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Post, Wendy %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Arnold, Alice M %A Stafford, Jeanette M %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Herrington, David M %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Launer, Leonore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Giulianini, Franco %A MacFadyen, Jean G %A Barratt, Bryan J %A Nyberg, Fredrik %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Emilsson, Valur %A Franco, Oscar H %A Ridker, Paul M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Liu, Yongmei %A Denny, Joshua C %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Adrienne Cupples, L %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Colhoun, Helen M %A Hitman, Graham %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Wouter Jukema, J %A Caulfield, Mark J %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors %K Pharmacogenetics %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Statins effectively lower LDL cholesterol levels in large studies and the observed interindividual response variability may be partially explained by genetic variation. Here we perform a pharmacogenetic meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in studies addressing the LDL cholesterol response to statins, including up to 18,596 statin-treated subjects. We validate the most promising signals in a further 22,318 statin recipients and identify two loci, SORT1/CELSR2/PSRC1 and SLCO1B1, not previously identified in GWAS. Moreover, we confirm the previously described associations with APOE and LPA. Our findings advance the understanding of the pharmacogenetic architecture of statin response.

%B Nat Commun %V 5 %P 5068 %8 2014 Oct 28 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25350695?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ncomms6068 %0 Journal Article %J Stroke %D 2014 %T Predicting stroke through genetic risk functions: the CHARGE Risk Score Project. %A Ibrahim-Verbaas, Carla A %A Fornage, Myriam %A Bis, Joshua C %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Meigs, James B %A Rao, Madhu %A Nalls, Mike %A Fontes, João D %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Ehret, Georg B %A Fox, Caroline S %A Malik, Rainer %A Dichgans, Martin %A Schmidt, Helena %A Lahti, Jari %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Lumley, Thomas %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Taylor, Kent D %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Rosamond, Wayne D %A Shahar, Eyal %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Amin, Najaf %A Wieberdink, Renske G %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Debette, Stephanie %A Xue, Luting %A Beiser, Alexa %A Wolf, Philip A %A DeCarli, Charles %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Longstreth, W T %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Launer, Lenore J %K Age Factors %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Area Under Curve %K Case-Control Studies %K Cohort Studies %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Regression Analysis %K Risk Factors %K ROC Curve %K Sex Factors %K Stroke %X

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Beyond the Framingham Stroke Risk Score, prediction of future stroke may improve with a genetic risk score (GRS) based on single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with stroke and its risk factors.

METHODS: The study includes 4 population-based cohorts with 2047 first incident strokes from 22,720 initially stroke-free European origin participants aged ≥55 years, who were followed for up to 20 years. GRSs were constructed with 324 single-nucleotide polymorphisms implicated in stroke and 9 risk factors. The association of the GRS to first incident stroke was tested using Cox regression; the GRS predictive properties were assessed with area under the curve statistics comparing the GRS with age and sex, Framingham Stroke Risk Score models, and reclassification statistics. These analyses were performed per cohort and in a meta-analysis of pooled data. Replication was sought in a case-control study of ischemic stroke.

RESULTS: In the meta-analysis, adding the GRS to the Framingham Stroke Risk Score, age and sex model resulted in a significant improvement in discrimination (all stroke: Δjoint area under the curve=0.016, P=2.3×10(-6); ischemic stroke: Δjoint area under the curve=0.021, P=3.7×10(-7)), although the overall area under the curve remained low. In all the studies, there was a highly significantly improved net reclassification index (P<10(-4)).

CONCLUSIONS: The single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with stroke and its risk factors result only in a small improvement in prediction of future stroke compared with the classical epidemiological risk factors for stroke.

%B Stroke %V 45 %P 403-12 %8 2014 Feb %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24436238?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/STROKEAHA.113.003044 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2014 %T Trans-ethnic meta-analysis of white blood cell phenotypes. %A Keller, Margaux F %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Okada, Yukinori %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Smith, Albert V %A Morris, Andrew P %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Lettre, Guillaume %A Harris, Tamara %A Garcia, Melissa %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Qayyum, Rehan %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Becker, Diane M %A Becker, Lewis C %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Keating, Brendan %A Reis, Jared %A Tang, Hua %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Kamatani, Naoyuki %A Nakamura, Yusuke %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Liu, Simin %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Felix, Janine F %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Franco, Oscar H %A Longo, Dan L %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Evans, Michelle K %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Rotter, Jerome I %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Takahashi, Atsushi %A Wilson, James G %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Nalls, Mike A %K African Americans %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Bayes Theorem %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genome, Human %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Leukocyte Count %K Leukocytes %K Linkage Disequilibrium %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %X

White blood cell (WBC) count is a common clinical measure used as a predictor of certain aspects of human health, including immunity and infection status. WBC count is also a complex trait that varies among individuals and ancestry groups. Differences in linkage disequilibrium structure and heterogeneity in allelic effects are expected to play a role in the associations observed between populations. Prior genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analyses have identified genomic loci associated with WBC and its subtypes, but much of the heritability of these phenotypes remains unexplained. Using GWAS summary statistics for over 50 000 individuals from three diverse populations (Japanese, African-American and European ancestry), a Bayesian model methodology was employed to account for heterogeneity between ancestry groups. This approach was used to perform a trans-ethnic meta-analysis of total WBC, neutrophil and monocyte counts. Ten previously known associations were replicated and six new loci were identified, including several regions harboring genes related to inflammation and immune cell function. Ninety-five percent credible interval regions were calculated to narrow the association signals and fine-map the putatively causal variants within loci. Finally, a conditional analysis was performed on the most significant SNPs identified by the trans-ethnic meta-analysis (MA), and nine secondary signals within loci previously associated with WBC or its subtypes were identified. This work illustrates the potential of trans-ethnic analysis and ascribes a critical role to multi-ethnic cohorts and consortia in exploring complex phenotypes with respect to variants that lie outside the European-biased GWAS pool.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 23 %P 6944-60 %8 2014 Dec 20 %G eng %N 25 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25096241?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddu401 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2014 %T Whole-exome sequencing identifies rare and low-frequency coding variants associated with LDL cholesterol. %A Lange, Leslie A %A Hu, Youna %A Zhang, He %A Xue, Chenyi %A Schmidt, Ellen M %A Tang, Zheng-Zheng %A Bizon, Chris %A Lange, Ethan M %A Smith, Joshua D %A Turner, Emily H %A Jun, Goo %A Kang, Hyun Min %A Peloso, Gina %A Auer, Paul %A Li, Kuo-Ping %A Flannick, Jason %A Zhang, Ji %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Gaulton, Kyle %A Lindgren, Cecilia %A Locke, Adam %A Manning, Alisa %A Sim, Xueling %A Rivas, Manuel A %A Holmen, Oddgeir L %A Gottesman, Omri %A Lu, Yingchang %A Ruderfer, Douglas %A Stahl, Eli A %A Duan, Qing %A Li, Yun %A Durda, Peter %A Jiao, Shuo %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Hofman, Albert %A Bis, Joshua C %A Correa, Adolfo %A Griswold, Michael E %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Smith, Albert V %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Zhang, Qunyuan %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Crosby, Jacy %A Wassel, Christina L %A Do, Ron %A Franceschini, Nora %A Martin, Lisa W %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Crosslin, David R %A Rosenthal, Elisabeth A %A Tsai, Michael %A Rieder, Mark J %A Farlow, Deborah N %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Lumley, Thomas %A Fox, Ervin R %A Carlson, Christopher S %A Peters, Ulrike %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Levy, Daniel %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Taylor, Herman A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Siscovick, David S %A Fornage, Myriam %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Hayward, Caroline %A Rudan, Igor %A Chen, Y Eugene %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Sætrom, Pål %A Hveem, Kristian %A Boehnke, Michael %A Groop, Leif %A McCarthy, Mark %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Gabriel, Stacey B %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Post, Wendy S %A North, Kari E %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Altshuler, David %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Lin, Dan-Yu %A Jarvik, Gail P %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Wilson, James G %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Rich, Stephen S %A Tracy, Russell P %A Willer, Cristen J %K Adult %K Aged %K Apolipoproteins E %K Cholesterol, LDL %K Cohort Studies %K Dyslipidemias %K Exome %K Female %K Follow-Up Studies %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Code %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Lipase %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proprotein Convertase 9 %K Proprotein Convertases %K Receptors, LDL %K Sequence Analysis, DNA %K Serine Endopeptidases %X

Elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) is a treatable, heritable risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified 157 variants associated with lipid levels but are not well suited to assess the impact of rare and low-frequency variants. To determine whether rare or low-frequency coding variants are associated with LDL-C, we exome sequenced 2,005 individuals, including 554 individuals selected for extreme LDL-C (>98(th) or <2(nd) percentile). Follow-up analyses included sequencing of 1,302 additional individuals and genotype-based analysis of 52,221 individuals. We observed significant evidence of association between LDL-C and the burden of rare or low-frequency variants in PNPLA5, encoding a phospholipase-domain-containing protein, and both known and previously unidentified variants in PCSK9, LDLR and APOB, three known lipid-related genes. The effect sizes for the burden of rare variants for each associated gene were substantially higher than those observed for individual SNPs identified from GWASs. We replicated the PNPLA5 signal in an independent large-scale sequencing study of 2,084 individuals. In conclusion, this large whole-exome-sequencing study for LDL-C identified a gene not known to be implicated in LDL-C and provides unique insight into the design and analysis of similar experiments.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 94 %P 233-45 %8 2014 Feb 06 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24507775?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.01.010 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Clin Nutr %D 2015 %T Consumption of meat is associated with higher fasting glucose and insulin concentrations regardless of glucose and insulin genetic risk scores: a meta-analysis of 50,345 Caucasians. %A Fretts, Amanda M %A Follis, Jack L %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Kalafati, Ioanna Panagiota %A Varga, Tibor V %A Frazier-Wood, Alexis C %A Houston, Denise K %A Lahti, Jari %A Ericson, Ulrika %A van den Hooven, Edith H %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Rice, Kenneth %A Renstrom, Frida %A North, Kari E %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Smith, Caren E %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Tiainen, Anna-Maija %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Manichaikul, Ani %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Raitakari, Olli %A Pankow, James S %A Djoussé, Luc %A Province, Michael A %A Hu, Frank B %A Lai, Chao-Qiang %A Keller, Margaux F %A Perälä, Mia-Maria %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Hofman, Albert %A Graff, Misa %A Kähönen, Mika %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Ordovas, Jose M %A Liu, Yongmei %A Männistö, Satu %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Deloukas, Panos %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Franks, Paul W %A Arnett, Donna K %A Nalls, Mike A %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Franco, Oscar H %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Dedoussis, George V %A Meigs, James B %A Siscovick, David S %K Blood Glucose %K Cohort Studies %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hyperglycemia %K Hyperinsulinism %K Insulin %K Insulin Resistance %K Insulin-Secreting Cells %K Meat %K Meat Products %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Risk Factors %X

BACKGROUND: Recent studies suggest that meat intake is associated with diabetes-related phenotypes. However, whether the associations of meat intake and glucose and insulin homeostasis are modified by genes related to glucose and insulin is unknown.

OBJECTIVE: We investigated the associations of meat intake and the interaction of meat with genotype on fasting glucose and insulin concentrations in Caucasians free of diabetes mellitus.

DESIGN: Fourteen studies that are part of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium participated in the analysis. Data were provided for up to 50,345 participants. Using linear regression within studies and a fixed-effects meta-analysis across studies, we examined 1) the associations of processed meat and unprocessed red meat intake with fasting glucose and insulin concentrations; and 2) the interactions of processed meat and unprocessed red meat with genetic risk score related to fasting glucose or insulin resistance on fasting glucose and insulin concentrations.

RESULTS: Processed meat was associated with higher fasting glucose, and unprocessed red meat was associated with both higher fasting glucose and fasting insulin concentrations after adjustment for potential confounders [not including body mass index (BMI)]. For every additional 50-g serving of processed meat per day, fasting glucose was 0.021 mmol/L (95% CI: 0.011, 0.030 mmol/L) higher. Every additional 100-g serving of unprocessed red meat per day was associated with a 0.037-mmol/L (95% CI: 0.023, 0.051-mmol/L) higher fasting glucose concentration and a 0.049-ln-pmol/L (95% CI: 0.035, 0.063-ln-pmol/L) higher fasting insulin concentration. After additional adjustment for BMI, observed associations were attenuated and no longer statistically significant. The association of processed meat and fasting insulin did not reach statistical significance after correction for multiple comparisons. Observed associations were not modified by genetic loci known to influence fasting glucose or insulin resistance.

CONCLUSION: The association of higher fasting glucose and insulin concentrations with meat consumption was not modified by an index of glucose- and insulin-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms. Six of the participating studies are registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT0000513 (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities), NCT00149435 (Cardiovascular Health Study), NCT00005136 (Family Heart Study), NCT00005121 (Framingham Heart Study), NCT00083369 (Genetics of Lipid Lowering Drugs and Diet Network), and NCT00005487 (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis).

%B Am J Clin Nutr %V 102 %P 1266-78 %8 2015 Nov %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26354543?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3945/ajcn.114.101238 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2015 %T Drug-Gene Interactions of Antihypertensive Medications and Risk of Incident Cardiovascular Disease: A Pharmacogenomics Study from the CHARGE Consortium. %A Bis, Joshua C %A Sitlani, Colleen %A Irvin, Ryan %A Avery, Christy L %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Sun, Fangui %A Evans, Daniel S %A Musani, Solomon K %A Li, Xiaohui %A Trompet, Stella %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Harris, Tamara B %A Quibrera, P Miguel %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Davis, Barry R %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Lange, Leslie A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stott, David J %A Franco, Oscar H %A Launer, Lenore J %A Stürmer, Til %A Taylor, Kent D %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Eckfeldt, John H %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Liu, Yongmei %A Wilson, James G %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Ford, Ian %A Hofman, Albert %A Sattar, Naveed %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Lumley, Thomas %A Cummings, Steven R %A Taylor, Herman A %A Post, Wendy %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Whitsel, Eric A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Arnett, Donna %K African Americans %K Aged %K Antihypertensive Agents %K Cardiovascular Diseases %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Hypertension %K Incidence %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Treatment Outcome %X

BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a major risk factor for a spectrum of cardiovascular diseases (CVD), including myocardial infarction, sudden death, and stroke. In the US, over 65 million people have high blood pressure and a large proportion of these individuals are prescribed antihypertensive medications. Although large long-term clinical trials conducted in the last several decades have identified a number of effective antihypertensive treatments that reduce the risk of future clinical complications, responses to therapy and protection from cardiovascular events vary among individuals.

METHODS: Using a genome-wide association study among 21,267 participants with pharmaceutically treated hypertension, we explored the hypothesis that genetic variants might influence or modify the effectiveness of common antihypertensive therapies on the risk of major cardiovascular outcomes. The classes of drug treatments included angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and diuretics. In the setting of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium, each study performed array-based genome-wide genotyping, imputed to HapMap Phase II reference panels, and used additive genetic models in proportional hazards or logistic regression models to evaluate drug-gene interactions for each of four therapeutic drug classes. We used meta-analysis to combine study-specific interaction estimates for approximately 2 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a discovery analysis among 15,375 European Ancestry participants (3,527 CVD cases) with targeted follow-up in a case-only study of 1,751 European Ancestry GenHAT participants as well as among 4,141 African-Americans (1,267 CVD cases).

RESULTS: Although drug-SNP interactions were biologically plausible, exposures and outcomes were well measured, and power was sufficient to detect modest interactions, we did not identify any statistically significant interactions from the four antihypertensive therapy meta-analyses (Pinteraction > 5.0×10-8). Similarly, findings were null for meta-analyses restricted to 66 SNPs with significant main effects on coronary artery disease or blood pressure from large published genome-wide association studies (Pinteraction ≥ 0.01). Our results suggest that there are no major pharmacogenetic influences of common SNPs on the relationship between blood pressure medications and the risk of incident CVD.

%B PLoS One %V 10 %P e0140496 %8 2015 %G eng %N 10 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26516778?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0140496 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2015 %T Gene × dietary pattern interactions in obesity: analysis of up to 68 317 adults of European ancestry. %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A Follis, Jack L %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Smith, Caren E %A Ahmad, Shafqat %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Voortman, Trudy %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Nuotio, Marja-Liisa %A Houston, Denise K %A Perälä, Mia-Maria %A Qi, Qibin %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Ganna, Andrea %A Mikkilä, Vera %A North, Kari E %A Siscovick, David S %A Harald, Kennet %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Johansson, Ingegerd %A Rissanen, Harri %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lahti, Jari %A Hu, Frank B %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Rukh, Gull %A Rich, Stephen %A Booij, Lisanne %A Dmitriou, Maria %A Ax, Erika %A Raitakari, Olli %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Männistö, Satu %A Hallmans, Göran %A Jula, Antti %A Ericson, Ulrika %A Jacobs, David R %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Deloukas, Panos %A Sjogren, Per %A Kähönen, Mika %A Djoussé, Luc %A Perola, Markus %A Barroso, Inês %A Hofman, Albert %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Viikari, Jorma %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kalafati, Ioanna P %A Franco, Oscar H %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Knekt, Paul %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Dedoussis, George V %A Qi, Lu %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Renstrom, Frida %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Franks, Paul W %K Adult %K Body Mass Index %K Case-Control Studies %K Diet, Western %K Epistasis, Genetic %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Obesity %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Obesity is highly heritable. Genetic variants showing robust associations with obesity traits have been identified through genome-wide association studies. We investigated whether a composite score representing healthy diet modifies associations of these variants with obesity traits. Totally, 32 body mass index (BMI)- and 14 waist-hip ratio (WHR)-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms were genotyped, and genetic risk scores (GRS) were calculated in 18 cohorts of European ancestry (n = 68 317). Diet score was calculated based on self-reported intakes of whole grains, fish, fruits, vegetables, nuts/seeds (favorable) and red/processed meats, sweets, sugar-sweetened beverages and fried potatoes (unfavorable). Multivariable adjusted, linear regression within each cohort followed by inverse variance-weighted, fixed-effects meta-analysis was used to characterize: (a) associations of each GRS with BMI and BMI-adjusted WHR and (b) diet score modification of genetic associations with BMI and BMI-adjusted WHR. Nominally significant interactions (P = 0.006-0.04) were observed between the diet score and WHR-GRS (but not BMI-GRS), two WHR loci (GRB14 rs10195252; LYPLAL1 rs4846567) and two BMI loci (LRRN6C rs10968576; MTIF3 rs4771122), for the respective BMI-adjusted WHR or BMI outcomes. Although the magnitudes of these select interactions were small, our data indicated that associations between genetic predisposition and obesity traits were stronger with a healthier diet. Our findings generate interesting hypotheses; however, experimental and functional studies are needed to determine their clinical relevance.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 24 %P 4728-38 %8 2015 Aug 15 %G eng %N 16 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25994509?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddv186 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2015 %T Genome of The Netherlands population-specific imputations identify an ABCA6 variant associated with cholesterol levels. %A van Leeuwen, Elisabeth M %A Karssen, Lennart C %A Deelen, Joris %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A Kanterakis, Alexandros %A Trompet, Stella %A Postmus, Iris %A Verweij, Niek %A van Enckevort, David J %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A White, Charles C %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Bartz, Traci M %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Joshi, Peter K %A Peloso, Gina M %A Deelen, Patrick %A van Dijk, Freerk %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A de Geus, Eco J %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Francioli, Laurent C %A Menelaou, Androniki %A Pulit, Sara L %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A Oostra, Ben A %A Franco, Oscar H %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Beekman, Marian %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Uh, Hae-Won %A Trochet, Holly %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Porteous, David J %A Sattar, Naveed %A Packard, Chris J %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Campbell, Harry %A Duan, Qing %A Lange, Leslie A %A Wilson, James F %A Hayward, Caroline %A Polasek, Ozren %A Vitart, Veronique %A Rudan, Igor %A Wright, Alan F %A Rich, Stephen S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Kearney, Patricia M %A Stott, David J %A Adrienne Cupples, L %A Jukema, J Wouter %A van der Harst, Pim %A Sijbrands, Eric J %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Swertz, Morris A %A van Ommen, Gert-Jan B %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Eline Slagboom, P %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %K ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters %K Cholesterol %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Association Studies %K Humans %K Mutation, Missense %K Netherlands %X

Variants associated with blood lipid levels may be population-specific. To identify low-frequency variants associated with this phenotype, population-specific reference panels may be used. Here we impute nine large Dutch biobanks (~35,000 samples) with the population-specific reference panel created by the Genome of The Netherlands Project and perform association testing with blood lipid levels. We report the discovery of five novel associations at four loci (P value <6.61 × 10(-4)), including a rare missense variant in ABCA6 (rs77542162, p.Cys1359Arg, frequency 0.034), which is predicted to be deleterious. The frequency of this ABCA6 variant is 3.65-fold increased in the Dutch and its effect (βLDL-C=0.135, βTC=0.140) is estimated to be very similar to those observed for single variants in well-known lipid genes, such as LDLR.

%B Nat Commun %V 6 %P 6065 %8 2015 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25751400?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ncomms7065 %0 Journal Article %J Biol Psychiatry %D 2015 %T Genome-wide studies of verbal declarative memory in nondemented older people: the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium. %A Debette, Stephanie %A Ibrahim Verbaas, Carla A %A Bressler, Jan %A Schuur, Maaike %A Smith, Albert %A Bis, Joshua C %A Davies, Gail %A Wolf, Christiane %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Chibnik, Lori B %A Yang, Qiong %A DeStefano, Anita L %A de Quervain, Dominique J F %A Srikanth, Velandai %A Lahti, Jari %A Grabe, Hans J %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Priebe, Lutz %A Yu, Lei %A Karbalai, Nazanin %A Hayward, Caroline %A Wilson, James F %A Campbell, Harry %A Petrovic, Katja %A Fornage, Myriam %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Yeo, Robin %A Boxall, Ruth %A Becker, James %A Stegle, Oliver %A Mather, Karen A %A Chouraki, Vincent %A Sun, Qi %A Rose, Lynda M %A Resnick, Susan %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Kirin, Mirna %A Wright, Alan F %A Jonsdottir, Maria K %A Au, Rhoda %A Becker, Albert %A Amin, Najaf %A Nalls, Mike A %A Turner, Stephen T %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Oostra, Ben %A Windham, Gwen %A Coker, Laura H %A Zhao, Wei %A Knopman, David S %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Griswold, Michael E %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Vitart, Veronique %A Hastie, Nicholas D %A Zgaga, Lina %A Rudan, Igor %A Polasek, Ozren %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Schofield, Peter %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A An, Yang %A Perry, Rodney T %A Kennedy, Richard E %A Sale, Michèle M %A Wang, Jing %A Wadley, Virginia G %A Liewald, David C %A Ridker, Paul M %A Gow, Alan J %A Pattie, Alison %A Starr, John M %A Porteous, David %A Liu, Xuan %A Thomson, Russell %A Armstrong, Nicola J %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Assareh, Arezoo A %A Kochan, Nicole A %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Palotie, Aarno %A Hsieh, Yi-Chen %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Vogler, Christian %A van Swieten, John C %A Shulman, Joshua M %A Beiser, Alexa %A Rotter, Jerome %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Hoffmann, Wolfgang %A Nöthen, Markus M %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Attia, John %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Dartigues, Jean-François %A Amieva, Hélène %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Garcia, Melissa %A Wolf, Philip A %A Hofman, Albert %A Longstreth, W T %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A DeJager, Philip L %A Sachdev, Perminder S %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Breteler, Monique M B %A Teumer, Alexander %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Cichon, Sven %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Grodstein, Francine %A Müller-Myhsok, Bertram %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Papassotiropoulos, Andreas %A Bennett, David A %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Deary, Ian J %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Launer, Lenore %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Mosley, Thomas H %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Aging %K Apolipoproteins E %K Claudin-5 %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Male %K Memory Disorders %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Proteins %K Proteoglycans %K Regression Analysis %K Sulfotransferases %K Verbal Learning %X

BACKGROUND: Memory performance in older persons can reflect genetic influences on cognitive function and dementing processes. We aimed to identify genetic contributions to verbal declarative memory in a community setting.

METHODS: We conducted genome-wide association studies for paragraph or word list delayed recall in 19 cohorts from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium, comprising 29,076 dementia- and stroke-free individuals of European descent, aged ≥45 years. Replication of suggestive associations (p < 5 × 10(-6)) was sought in 10,617 participants of European descent, 3811 African-Americans, and 1561 young adults.

RESULTS: rs4420638, near APOE, was associated with poorer delayed recall performance in discovery (p = 5.57 × 10(-10)) and replication cohorts (p = 5.65 × 10(-8)). This association was stronger for paragraph than word list delayed recall and in the oldest persons. Two associations with specific tests, in subsets of the total sample, reached genome-wide significance in combined analyses of discovery and replication (rs11074779 [HS3ST4], p = 3.11 × 10(-8), and rs6813517 [SPOCK3], p = 2.58 × 10(-8)) near genes involved in immune response. A genetic score combining 58 independent suggestive memory risk variants was associated with increasing Alzheimer disease pathology in 725 autopsy samples. Association of memory risk loci with gene expression in 138 human hippocampus samples showed cis-associations with WDR48 and CLDN5, both related to ubiquitin metabolism.

CONCLUSIONS: This largest study to date exploring the genetics of memory function in ~40,000 older individuals revealed genome-wide associations and suggested an involvement of immune and ubiquitin pathways.

%B Biol Psychiatry %V 77 %P 749-63 %8 2015 Apr 15 %G eng %N 8 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25648963?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.biopsych.2014.08.027 %0 Journal Article %J J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci %D 2015 %T GWAS of longevity in CHARGE consortium confirms APOE and FOXO3 candidacy. %A Broer, Linda %A Buchman, Aron S %A Deelen, Joris %A Evans, Daniel S %A Faul, Jessica D %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Sebastiani, Paola %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Smith, Albert V %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Yu, Lei %A Arnold, Alice M %A Aspelund, Thor %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A De Jager, Philip L %A Eirkisdottir, Gudny %A Evans, Denis A %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Hofman, Albert %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Oostra, Ben A %A Orwoll, Eric S %A Parimi, Neeta %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Singleton, Andrew %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Zhao, Wei %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Bennett, David A %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Karasik, David %A Launer, Lenore J %A Perls, Thomas T %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Weir, David R %A Newman, Anne B %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Murabito, Joanne M %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Apolipoproteins E %K Cell Adhesion Molecules %K Cohort Studies %K Female %K Forkhead Box Protein O3 %K Forkhead Transcription Factors %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Longevity %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Receptors, Kainic Acid %X

BACKGROUND: The genetic contribution to longevity in humans has been estimated to range from 15% to 25%. Only two genes, APOE and FOXO3, have shown association with longevity in multiple independent studies.

METHODS: We conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies including 6,036 longevity cases, age ≥90 years, and 3,757 controls that died between ages 55 and 80 years. We additionally attempted to replicate earlier identified single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations with longevity.

RESULTS: In our meta-analysis, we found suggestive evidence for the association of SNPs near CADM2 (odds ratio [OR] = 0.81; p value = 9.66 × 10(-7)) and GRIK2 (odds ratio = 1.24; p value = 5.09 × 10(-8)) with longevity. When attempting to replicate findings earlier identified in genome-wide association studies, only the APOE locus consistently replicated. In an additional look-up of the candidate gene FOXO3, we found that an earlier identified variant shows a highly significant association with longevity when including published data with our meta-analysis (odds ratio = 1.17; p value = 1.85×10(-10)).

CONCLUSIONS: We did not identify new genome-wide significant associations with longevity and did not replicate earlier findings except for APOE and FOXO3. Our inability to find new associations with survival to ages ≥90 years because longevity represents multiple complex traits with heterogeneous genetic underpinnings, or alternatively, that longevity may be regulated by rare variants that are not captured by standard genome-wide genotyping and imputation of common variants.

%B J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci %V 70 %P 110-8 %8 2015 Jan %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25199915?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/gerona/glu166 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2015 %T Low-frequency and rare exome chip variants associate with fasting glucose and type 2 diabetes susceptibility. %A Wessel, Jennifer %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Willems, Sara M %A Wang, Shuai %A Yaghootkar, Hanieh %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Dauriz, Marco %A Hivert, Marie-France %A Raghavan, Sridharan %A Lipovich, Leonard %A Hidalgo, Bertha %A Fox, Keolu %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A An, Ping %A Lu, Yingchang %A Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J %A Grarup, Niels %A Ehm, Margaret G %A Li, Li %A Baldridge, Abigail S %A Stančáková, Alena %A Abrol, Ravinder %A Besse, Céline %A Boland, Anne %A Bork-Jensen, Jette %A Fornage, Myriam %A Freitag, Daniel F %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hara, Kazuo %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Lange, Leslie A %A Layton, Jill C %A Li, Man %A Hua Zhao, Jing %A Meidtner, Karina %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Nalls, Mike A %A Peters, Marjolein J %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Silveira, Angela %A Smith, Albert V %A Southam, Lorraine %A Stoiber, Marcus H %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Taylor, Kent D %A Varga, Tibor V %A Allin, Kristine H %A Amin, Najaf %A Aponte, Jennifer L %A Aung, Tin %A Barbieri, Caterina %A Bihlmeyer, Nathan A %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bombieri, Cristina %A Bowden, Donald W %A Burns, Sean M %A Chen, Yuning %A Chen, Yii-DerI %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Correa, Adolfo %A Czajkowski, Jacek %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Ehret, Georg B %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Escher, Stefan A %A Farmaki, Aliki-Eleni %A Frånberg, Mattias %A Gambaro, Giovanni %A Giulianini, Franco %A Goddard, William A %A Goel, Anuj %A Gottesman, Omri %A Grove, Megan L %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Hai, Yang %A Hallmans, Göran %A Heo, Jiyoung %A Hoffmann, Per %A Ikram, Mohammad K %A Jensen, Richard A %A Jørgensen, Marit E %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Karaleftheri, Maria %A Khor, Chiea C %A Kirkpatrick, Andrea %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Lange, Ethan M %A Lee, I T %A Lee, Wen-Jane %A Leong, Aaron %A Liao, Jiemin %A Liu, Chunyu %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Linneberg, Allan %A Malerba, Giovanni %A Mamakou, Vasiliki %A Marouli, Eirini %A Maruthur, Nisa M %A Matchan, Angela %A McKean-Cowdin, Roberta %A McLeod, Olga %A Metcalf, Ginger A %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Muzny, Donna M %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Pasko, Dorota %A Peter, Andreas %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Renstrom, Frida %A Rice, Ken %A Sala, Cinzia F %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Serafetinidis, Ioannis %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Speliotes, Elizabeth K %A Stahl, Eli A %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Tentolouris, Nikos %A Thanopoulou, Anastasia %A Torres, Mina %A Traglia, Michela %A Tsafantakis, Emmanouil %A Javad, Sundas %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zengini, Eleni %A Becker, Diane M %A Bis, Joshua C %A Brown, James B %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Hansen, Torben %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Karter, Andrew J %A Lorenzo, Carlos %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Norris, Jill M %A Peloso, Gina M %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A Varma, Rohit %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Boeing, Heiner %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Dedoussis, George %A Deloukas, Panos %A Ferrannini, Ele %A Franco, Oscar H %A Franks, Paul W %A Gibbs, Richard A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hofman, Albert %A Jansson, Jan-Håkan %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Levy, Daniel %A Oostra, Ben A %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A O'Rahilly, Stephen %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Pankow, James S %A Polasek, Ozren %A Province, Michael A %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rudan, Igor %A Schulze, Matthias B %A Smith, Blair H %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Walker, Mark %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wong, Tien Y %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Laakso, Markku %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tai, E Shyong %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Kao, W H Linda %A Florez, Jose C %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Wilson, James G %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Siscovick, David S %A Dupuis, Josée %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Meigs, James B %A Scott, Robert A %A Goodarzi, Mark O %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Blood Glucose %K Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Exome %K Fasting %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Loci %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genetic Variation %K Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor %K Glucose-6-Phosphatase %K Humans %K Insulin %K Mutation Rate %K Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %X

Fasting glucose and insulin are intermediate traits for type 2 diabetes. Here we explore the role of coding variation on these traits by analysis of variants on the HumanExome BeadChip in 60,564 non-diabetic individuals and in 16,491 T2D cases and 81,877 controls. We identify a novel association of a low-frequency nonsynonymous SNV in GLP1R (A316T; rs10305492; MAF=1.4%) with lower FG (β=-0.09±0.01 mmol l(-1), P=3.4 × 10(-12)), T2D risk (OR[95%CI]=0.86[0.76-0.96], P=0.010), early insulin secretion (β=-0.07±0.035 pmolinsulin mmolglucose(-1), P=0.048), but higher 2-h glucose (β=0.16±0.05 mmol l(-1), P=4.3 × 10(-4)). We identify a gene-based association with FG at G6PC2 (pSKAT=6.8 × 10(-6)) driven by four rare protein-coding SNVs (H177Y, Y207S, R283X and S324P). We identify rs651007 (MAF=20%) in the first intron of ABO at the putative promoter of an antisense lncRNA, associating with higher FG (β=0.02±0.004 mmol l(-1), P=1.3 × 10(-8)). Our approach identifies novel coding variant associations and extends the allelic spectrum of variation underlying diabetes-related quantitative traits and T2D susceptibility.

%B Nat Commun %V 6 %P 5897 %8 2015 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25631608?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ncomms6897 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2015 %T Multiethnic genome-wide association study of cerebral white matter hyperintensities on MRI. %A Verhaaren, Benjamin F J %A Debette, Stephanie %A Bis, Joshua C %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Adams, Hieab H %A Beecham, Ashley H %A Rajan, Kumar B %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Barral, Sandra %A van Buchem, Mark A %A van der Grond, Jeroen %A Smith, Albert V %A Hegenscheid, Katrin %A Aggarwal, Neelum T %A de Andrade, Mariza %A Atkinson, Elizabeth J %A Beekman, Marian %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Blanton, Susan H %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brickman, Adam M %A Bryan, R Nick %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Chen, Christopher P L H %A Chouraki, Vincent %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Crivello, Fabrice %A Deary, Ian J %A Deelen, Joris %A De Jager, Philip L %A Dufouil, Carole %A Elkind, Mitchell S V %A Evans, Denis A %A Freudenberger, Paul %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Guðnason, Vilmundur %A Habes, Mohamad %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Hilal, Saima %A Hofer, Edith %A Hofman, Albert %A Ibrahim-Verbaas, Carla A %A Knopman, David S %A Lewis, Cora E %A Liao, Jiemin %A Liewald, David C M %A Luciano, Michelle %A van der Lugt, Aad %A Martinez, Oliver O %A Mayeux, Richard %A Mazoyer, Bernard %A Nalls, Mike %A Nauck, Matthias %A Niessen, Wiro J %A Oostra, Ben A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A von Sarnowski, Bettina %A Schmidt, Helena %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Schuur, Maaike %A Sidney, Stephen S %A Sigurdsson, Sigurdur %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Stott, David J M %A van Swieten, John C %A Teumer, Alexander %A Töglhofer, Anna Maria %A Traylor, Matthew %A Trompet, Stella %A Turner, Stephen T %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Uh, Hae-Won %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Wang, Jing J %A Wong, Tien Y %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Windham, B Gwen %A Wittfeld, Katharina %A Wolf, Christiane %A Wright, Clinton B %A Yang, Qiong %A Zhao, Wei %A Zijdenbos, Alex %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Sacco, Ralph L %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Longstreth, W T %A DeCarli, Charles C %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Launer, Lenore J %A Grabe, Hans J %A Seshadri, Sudha S %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Fornage, Myriam %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Chromosomes, Human %K Continental Population Groups %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Middle Aged %K Models, Genetic %K Stroke %K White Matter %X

BACKGROUND: The burden of cerebral white matter hyperintensities (WMH) is associated with an increased risk of stroke, dementia, and death. WMH are highly heritable, but their genetic underpinnings are incompletely characterized. To identify novel genetic variants influencing WMH burden, we conducted a meta-analysis of multiethnic genome-wide association studies.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We included 21 079 middle-aged to elderly individuals from 29 population-based cohorts, who were free of dementia and stroke and were of European (n=17 936), African (n=1943), Hispanic (n=795), and Asian (n=405) descent. WMH burden was quantified on MRI either by a validated automated segmentation method or a validated visual grading scale. Genotype data in each study were imputed to the 1000 Genomes reference. Within each ethnic group, we investigated the relationship between each single-nucleotide polymorphism and WMH burden using a linear regression model adjusted for age, sex, intracranial volume, and principal components of ancestry. A meta-analysis was conducted for each ethnicity separately and for the combined sample. In the European descent samples, we confirmed a previously known locus on chr17q25 (P=2.7×10(-19)) and identified novel loci on chr10q24 (P=1.6×10(-9)) and chr2p21 (P=4.4×10(-8)). In the multiethnic meta-analysis, we identified 2 additional loci, on chr1q22 (P=2.0×10(-8)) and chr2p16 (P=1.5×10(-8)). The novel loci contained genes that have been implicated in Alzheimer disease (chr2p21 and chr10q24), intracerebral hemorrhage (chr1q22), neuroinflammatory diseases (chr2p21), and glioma (chr10q24 and chr2p16).

CONCLUSIONS: We identified 4 novel genetic loci that implicate inflammatory and glial proliferative pathways in the development of WMH in addition to previously proposed ischemic mechanisms.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 8 %P 398-409 %8 2015 Apr %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25663218?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.114.000858 %0 Journal Article %J Blood %D 2015 %T Rare and low-frequency variants and their association with plasma levels of fibrinogen, FVII, FVIII, and vWF. %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A de Vries, Paul S %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Auer, Paul L %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Lin, Li-An %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Grove, Megan L %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Cushman, Mary %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Qi, Lihong %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Harris, Sarah E %A Polasek, Ozren %A Riess, Helene %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rose, Lynda M %A Goel, Anuj %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A Yao, Jie %A Tang, Weihong %A Levy, Daniel %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Becker, Diane M %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Giulianini, Franco %A Greinacher, Andreas %A Hofman, Albert %A Huang, Chiang-Ching %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Silveira, Angela %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Wright, Alan F %A McKnight, Barbara %A Franco, Oscar H %A Zakai, Neil %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Völker, Uwe %A Watkins, Hugh %A Fornage, Myriam %A Hamsten, Anders %A Deary, Ian J %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Hayward, Caroline %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Reiner, Alex P %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Smith, Nicholas L %K Cohort Studies %K Factor VII %K Factor VIII %K Fibrinogen %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Variation %K Humans %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Potassium Channels %K von Willebrand Factor %X

Fibrinogen, coagulation factor VII (FVII), and factor VIII (FVIII) and its carrier von Willebrand factor (vWF) play key roles in hemostasis. Previously identified common variants explain only a small fraction of the trait heritabilities, and additional variations may be explained by associations with rarer variants with larger effects. The aim of this study was to identify low-frequency (minor allele frequency [MAF] ≥0.01 and <0.05) and rare (MAF <0.01) variants that influence plasma concentrations of these 4 hemostatic factors by meta-analyzing exome chip data from up to 76,000 participants of 4 ancestries. We identified 12 novel associations of low-frequency (n = 2) and rare (n = 10) variants across the fibrinogen, FVII, FVIII, and vWF traits that were independent of previously identified associations. Novel loci were found within previously reported genes and had effect sizes much larger than and independent of previously identified common variants. In addition, associations at KCNT1, HID1, and KATNB1 identified new candidate genes related to hemostasis for follow-up replication and functional genomic analysis. Newly identified low-frequency and rare-variant associations accounted for modest amounts of trait variance and therefore are unlikely to increase predicted trait heritability but provide new information for understanding individual variation in hemostasis pathways.

%B Blood %V 126 %P e19-29 %8 2015 Sep 10 %G eng %N 11 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26105150?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1182/blood-2015-02-624551 %0 Journal Article %J JAMA %D 2015 %T Subclinical thyroid dysfunction and fracture risk: a meta-analysis. %A Blum, Manuel R %A Bauer, Douglas C %A Collet, Tinh-Hai %A Fink, Howard A %A Cappola, Anne R %A da Costa, Bruno R %A Wirth, Christina D %A Peeters, Robin P %A Asvold, Bjørn O %A den Elzen, Wendy P J %A Luben, Robert N %A Imaizumi, Misa %A Bremner, Alexandra P %A Gogakos, Apostolos %A Eastell, Richard %A Kearney, Patricia M %A Strotmeyer, Elsa S %A Wallace, Erin R %A Hoff, Mari %A Ceresini, Graziano %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Stott, David J %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Langhammer, Arnuf %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gussekloo, Jacobijn %A Williams, Graham R %A Walsh, John P %A Jüni, Peter %A Aujesky, Drahomir %A Rodondi, Nicolas %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Female %K Fractures, Bone %K Hip Fractures %K Humans %K Hyperthyroidism %K Hypothyroidism %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Risk Factors %K Spinal Fractures %K Thyrotropin %K Young Adult %X

IMPORTANCE: Associations between subclinical thyroid dysfunction and fractures are unclear and clinical trials are lacking.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the association of subclinical thyroid dysfunction with hip, nonspine, spine, or any fractures.

DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION: The databases of MEDLINE and EMBASE (inception to March 26, 2015) were searched without language restrictions for prospective cohort studies with thyroid function data and subsequent fractures.

DATA EXTRACTION: Individual participant data were obtained from 13 prospective cohorts in the United States, Europe, Australia, and Japan. Levels of thyroid function were defined as euthyroidism (thyroid-stimulating hormone [TSH], 0.45-4.49 mIU/L), subclinical hyperthyroidism (TSH <0.45 mIU/L), and subclinical hypothyroidism (TSH ≥4.50-19.99 mIU/L) with normal thyroxine concentrations.

MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was hip fracture. Any fractures, nonspine fractures, and clinical spine fractures were secondary outcomes.

RESULTS: Among 70,298 participants, 4092 (5.8%) had subclinical hypothyroidism and 2219 (3.2%) had subclinical hyperthyroidism. During 762,401 person-years of follow-up, hip fracture occurred in 2975 participants (4.6%; 12 studies), any fracture in 2528 participants (9.0%; 8 studies), nonspine fracture in 2018 participants (8.4%; 8 studies), and spine fracture in 296 participants (1.3%; 6 studies). In age- and sex-adjusted analyses, the hazard ratio (HR) for subclinical hyperthyroidism vs euthyroidism was 1.36 for hip fracture (95% CI, 1.13-1.64; 146 events in 2082 participants vs 2534 in 56,471); for any fracture, HR was 1.28 (95% CI, 1.06-1.53; 121 events in 888 participants vs 2203 in 25,901); for nonspine fracture, HR was 1.16 (95% CI, 0.95-1.41; 107 events in 946 participants vs 1745 in 21,722); and for spine fracture, HR was 1.51 (95% CI, 0.93-2.45; 17 events in 732 participants vs 255 in 20,328). Lower TSH was associated with higher fracture rates: for TSH of less than 0.10 mIU/L, HR was 1.61 for hip fracture (95% CI, 1.21-2.15; 47 events in 510 participants); for any fracture, HR was 1.98 (95% CI, 1.41-2.78; 44 events in 212 participants); for nonspine fracture, HR was 1.61 (95% CI, 0.96-2.71; 32 events in 185 participants); and for spine fracture, HR was 3.57 (95% CI, 1.88-6.78; 8 events in 162 participants). Risks were similar after adjustment for other fracture risk factors. Endogenous subclinical hyperthyroidism (excluding thyroid medication users) was associated with HRs of 1.52 (95% CI, 1.19-1.93) for hip fracture, 1.42 (95% CI, 1.16-1.74) for any fracture, and 1.74 (95% CI, 1.01-2.99) for spine fracture. No association was found between subclinical hypothyroidism and fracture risk.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Subclinical hyperthyroidism was associated with an increased risk of hip and other fractures, particularly among those with TSH levels of less than 0.10 mIU/L and those with endogenous subclinical hyperthyroidism. Further study is needed to determine whether treating subclinical hyperthyroidism can prevent fractures.

%B JAMA %V 313 %P 2055-65 %8 2015 May 26 %G eng %N 20 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26010634?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1001/jama.2015.5161 %0 Journal Article %J J Am Coll Cardiol %D 2016 %T 52 Genetic Loci Influencing Myocardial Mass. %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Setten, Jessica %A Verweij, Niek %A Vogler, Georg %A Franke, Lude %A Maurano, Matthew T %A Wang, Xinchen %A Mateo Leach, Irene %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Hayward, Caroline %A Sorice, Rossella %A Meirelles, Osorio %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Polasek, Ozren %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Arking, Dan E %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Trompet, Stella %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Smith, Albert V %A Dörr, Marcus %A Kerr, Kathleen F %A Magnani, Jared W %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Zhang, Weihua %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Silva, Claudia T %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Tragante, Vinicius %A Esko, Tõnu %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Adriaens, Michiel E %A Andersen, Karl %A Barnett, Phil %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bodmer, Rolf %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Campbell, Harry %A Cannon, Megan V %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chen, Lin Y %A Delitala, Alessandro %A Devereux, Richard B %A Doevendans, Pieter A %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Ford, Ian %A Gieger, Christian %A Harris, Tamara B %A Haugen, Eric %A Heinig, Matthias %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Hillege, Hans L %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Hofman, Albert %A Hubner, Norbert %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Iorio, Annamaria %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kellis, Manolis %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooner, Ishminder K %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kors, Jan A %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Lage, Kasper %A Launer, Lenore J %A Levy, Daniel %A Lundby, Alicia %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A May, Dalit %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Nappo, Stefania %A Naitza, Silvia %A Neph, Shane %A Nord, Alex S %A Nutile, Teresa %A Okin, Peter M %A Olsen, Jesper V %A Oostra, Ben A %A Penninger, Josef M %A Pennacchio, Len A %A Pers, Tune H %A Perz, Siegfried %A Peters, Annette %A Pinto, Yigal M %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Pilia, Maria Grazia %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Prins, Bram P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Raychaudhuri, Soumya %A Rice, Ken M %A Rossin, Elizabeth J %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schafer, Sebastian %A Schlessinger, David %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Sehmi, Jobanpreet %A Silljé, Herman H W %A Sinagra, Gianfranco %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Slowikowski, Kamil %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Spector, Timothy D %A Spiering, Wilko %A Stamatoyannopoulos, John A %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tan, Sian-Tsung %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Trinh, Bosco %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van den Boogaard, Malou %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A van Gilst, Wiek H %A Viikari, Jorma S %A Visscher, Peter M %A Vitart, Veronique %A Völker, Uwe %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Weichenberger, Christian X %A Westra, Harm-Jan %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H %A Yang, Jian %A Bezzina, Connie R %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Snieder, Harold %A Wright, Alan F %A Rudan, Igor %A Boyer, Laurie A %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A van Veldhuisen, Dirk J %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ciullo, Marina %A Sanna, Serena %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Wilson, James F %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kääb, Stefan %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Felix, Stephan B %A Heckbert, Susan R %A de Boer, Rudolf A %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Chambers, John C %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Visel, Axel %A Christoffels, Vincent M %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Samani, Nilesh J %A de Bakker, Paul I W %X

BACKGROUND: Myocardial mass is a key determinant of cardiac muscle function and hypertrophy. Myocardial depolarization leading to cardiac muscle contraction is reflected by the amplitude and duration of the QRS complex on the electrocardiogram (ECG). Abnormal QRS amplitude or duration reflect changes in myocardial mass and conduction, and are associated with increased risk of heart failure and death.

OBJECTIVES: This meta-analysis sought to gain insights into the genetic determinants of myocardial mass.

METHODS: We carried out a genome-wide association meta-analysis of 4 QRS traits in up to 73,518 individuals of European ancestry, followed by extensive biological and functional assessment.

RESULTS: We identified 52 genomic loci, of which 32 are novel, that are reliably associated with 1 or more QRS phenotypes at p < 1 × 10(-8). These loci are enriched in regions of open chromatin, histone modifications, and transcription factor binding, suggesting that they represent regions of the genome that are actively transcribed in the human heart. Pathway analyses provided evidence that these loci play a role in cardiac hypertrophy. We further highlighted 67 candidate genes at the identified loci that are preferentially expressed in cardiac tissue and associated with cardiac abnormalities in Drosophila melanogaster and Mus musculus. We validated the regulatory function of a novel variant in the SCN5A/SCN10A locus in vitro and in vivo.

CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, our findings provide new insights into genes and biological pathways controlling myocardial mass and may help identify novel therapeutic targets.

%B J Am Coll Cardiol %V 68 %P 1435-48 %8 2016 Sep 27 %G eng %N 13 %R 10.1016/j.jacc.2016.07.729 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2016 %T Discovery of Genetic Variation on Chromosome 5q22 Associated with Mortality in Heart Failure. %A Smith, J Gustav %A Felix, Janine F %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Kalogeropoulos, Andreas %A Trompet, Stella %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Gidlöf, Olof %A Wang, Xinchen %A Morley, Michael %A Mendelson, Michael %A Joehanes, Roby %A Ligthart, Symen %A Shan, Xiaoyin %A Bis, Joshua C %A Wang, Ying A %A Sjögren, Marketa %A Ngwa, Julius %A Brandimarto, Jeffrey %A Stott, David J %A Aguilar, David %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Sesso, Howard D %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Taylor, Kent D %A Ford, Ian %A Yao, Chen %A Liu, Chunyu %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A van der Harst, Pim %A Stricker, Bruno H Ch %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Gaziano, J Michael %A Hofman, Albert %A Moravec, Christine S %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kellis, Manolis %A van Meurs, Joyce B %A Margulies, Kenneth B %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Levy, Daniel %A Olde, Björn %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Djoussé, Luc %A Franco, Oscar H %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Boyer, Laurie A %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Butler, Javed %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Cappola, Thomas P %A Smith, Nicholas L %X

Failure of the human heart to maintain sufficient output of blood for the demands of the body, heart failure, is a common condition with high mortality even with modern therapeutic alternatives. To identify molecular determinants of mortality in patients with new-onset heart failure, we performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies and follow-up genotyping in independent populations. We identified and replicated an association for a genetic variant on chromosome 5q22 with 36% increased risk of death in subjects with heart failure (rs9885413, P = 2.7x10-9). We provide evidence from reporter gene assays, computational predictions and epigenomic marks that this polymorphism increases activity of an enhancer region active in multiple human tissues. The polymorphism was further reproducibly associated with a DNA methylation signature in whole blood (P = 4.5x10-40) that also associated with allergic sensitization and expression in blood of the cytokine TSLP (P = 1.1x10-4). Knockdown of the transcription factor predicted to bind the enhancer region (NHLH1) in a human cell line (HEK293) expressing NHLH1 resulted in lower TSLP expression. In addition, we observed evidence of recent positive selection acting on the risk allele in populations of African descent. Our findings provide novel genetic leads to factors that influence mortality in patients with heart failure.

%B PLoS Genet %V 12 %P e1006034 %8 2016 May %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27149122?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006034 %0 Journal Article %J Genome Biol %D 2016 %T DNA methylation signatures of chronic low-grade inflammation are associated with complex diseases. %A Ligthart, Symen %A Marzi, Carola %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Mendelson, Michael M %A Conneely, Karen N %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Colicino, Elena %A Waite, Lindsay L %A Joehanes, Roby %A Guan, Weihua %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Elks, Cathy %A Marioni, Riccardo %A Jhun, Min A %A Agha, Golareh %A Bressler, Jan %A Ward-Caviness, Cavin K %A Chen, Brian H %A Huan, Tianxiao %A Bakulski, Kelly %A Salfati, Elias L %A Fiorito, Giovanni %A Wahl, Simone %A Schramm, Katharina %A Sha, Jin %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Just, Allan C %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Pilling, Luke C %A Pankow, James S %A Tsao, Phil S %A Liu, Chunyu %A Zhao, Wei %A Guarrera, Simonetta %A Michopoulos, Vasiliki J %A Smith, Alicia K %A Peters, Marjolein J %A Melzer, David %A Vokonas, Pantel %A Fornage, Myriam %A Prokisch, Holger %A Bis, Joshua C %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Herder, Christian %A Grallert, Harald %A Yao, Chen %A Shah, Sonia %A McRae, Allan F %A Lin, Honghuang %A Horvath, Steve %A Fallin, Daniele %A Hofman, Albert %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Feinberg, Andrew P %A Starr, John M %A Visscher, Peter M %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Absher, Devin M %A Binder, Elisabeth B %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Peters, Annette %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Matullo, Giuseppe %A Schwartz, Joel D %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Franco, Oscar H %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Levy, Daniel %A Turner, Stephen T %A Deary, Ian J %A Ressler, Kerry J %A Dupuis, Josée %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Ong, Ken K %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Arnett, Donna K %A Baccarelli, Andrea A %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Dehghan, Abbas %X

BACKGROUND: Chronic low-grade inflammation reflects a subclinical immune response implicated in the pathogenesis of complex diseases. Identifying genetic loci where DNA methylation is associated with chronic low-grade inflammation may reveal novel pathways or therapeutic targets for inflammation.

RESULTS: We performed a meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) of serum C-reactive protein (CRP), which is a sensitive marker of low-grade inflammation, in a large European population (n = 8863) and trans-ethnic replication in African Americans (n = 4111). We found differential methylation at 218 CpG sites to be associated with CRP (P < 1.15 × 10(-7)) in the discovery panel of European ancestry and replicated (P < 2.29 × 10(-4)) 58 CpG sites (45 unique loci) among African Americans. To further characterize the molecular and clinical relevance of the findings, we examined the association with gene expression, genetic sequence variants, and clinical outcomes. DNA methylation at nine (16%) CpG sites was associated with whole blood gene expression in cis (P < 8.47 × 10(-5)), ten (17%) CpG sites were associated with a nearby genetic variant (P < 2.50 × 10(-3)), and 51 (88%) were also associated with at least one related cardiometabolic entity (P < 9.58 × 10(-5)). An additive weighted score of replicated CpG sites accounted for up to 6% inter-individual variation (R2) of age-adjusted and sex-adjusted CRP, independent of known CRP-related genetic variants.

CONCLUSION: We have completed an EWAS of chronic low-grade inflammation and identified many novel genetic loci underlying inflammation that may serve as targets for the development of novel therapeutic interventions for inflammation.

%B Genome Biol %V 17 %P 255 %8 2016 Dec 12 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1186/s13059-016-1119-5 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2016 %T Epigenetic Signatures of Cigarette Smoking. %A Joehanes, Roby %A Just, Allan C %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Pilling, Luke C %A Reynolds, Lindsay M %A Mandaviya, Pooja R %A Guan, Weihua %A Xu, Tao %A Elks, Cathy E %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Moreno-Macias, Hortensia %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Dhingra, Radhika %A Yousefi, Paul %A Pankow, James S %A Kunze, Sonja %A Shah, Sonia H %A McRae, Allan F %A Lohman, Kurt %A Sha, Jin %A Absher, Devin M %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Zhao, Wei %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Bressler, Jan %A Grove, Megan L %A Huan, Tianxiao %A Liu, Chunyu %A Mendelson, Michael M %A Yao, Chen %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Peters, Annette %A Wang-Sattler, Rui %A Visscher, Peter M %A Wray, Naomi R %A Starr, John M %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Rodriguez, Carlos J %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Zhi, Degui %A Barrdahl, Myrto %A Vineis, Paolo %A Ambatipudi, Srikant %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Schwartz, Joel %A Colicino, Elena %A Hou, Lifang %A Vokonas, Pantel S %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Singleton, Andrew B %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Turner, Stephen T %A Ware, Erin B %A Smith, Alicia K %A Klengel, Torsten %A Binder, Elisabeth B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Taylor, Kent D %A Gharib, Sina A %A Swenson, Brenton R %A Liang, Liming %A DeMeo, Dawn L %A O'Connor, George T %A Herceg, Zdenko %A Ressler, Kerry J %A Conneely, Karen N %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Melzer, David %A Baccarelli, Andrea A %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Romieu, Isabelle %A Arnett, Donna K %A Ong, Ken K %A Liu, Yongmei %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Deary, Ian J %A Fornage, Myriam %A Levy, Daniel %A London, Stephanie J %X

BACKGROUND: DNA methylation leaves a long-term signature of smoking exposure and is one potential mechanism by which tobacco exposure predisposes to adverse health outcomes, such as cancers, osteoporosis, lung, and cardiovascular disorders.

METHODS AND RESULTS: To comprehensively determine the association between cigarette smoking and DNA methylation, we conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide DNA methylation assessed using the Illumina BeadChip 450K array on 15 907 blood-derived DNA samples from participants in 16 cohorts (including 2433 current, 6518 former, and 6956 never smokers). Comparing current versus never smokers, 2623 cytosine-phosphate-guanine sites (CpGs), annotated to 1405 genes, were statistically significantly differentially methylated at Bonferroni threshold of P<1×10(-7) (18 760 CpGs at false discovery rate <0.05). Genes annotated to these CpGs were enriched for associations with several smoking-related traits in genome-wide studies including pulmonary function, cancers, inflammatory diseases, and heart disease. Comparing former versus never smokers, 185 of the CpGs that differed between current and never smokers were significant P<1×10(-7) (2623 CpGs at false discovery rate <0.05), indicating a pattern of persistent altered methylation, with attenuation, after smoking cessation. Transcriptomic integration identified effects on gene expression at many differentially methylated CpGs.

CONCLUSIONS: Cigarette smoking has a broad impact on genome-wide methylation that, at many loci, persists many years after smoking cessation. Many of the differentially methylated genes were novel genes with respect to biological effects of smoking and might represent therapeutic targets for prevention or treatment of tobacco-related diseases. Methylation at these sites could also serve as sensitive and stable biomarkers of lifetime exposure to tobacco smoke.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 9 %P 436-447 %8 2016 Oct %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.116.001506 %0 Journal Article %J J Alzheimers Dis %D 2016 %T Evaluation of a Genetic Risk Score to Improve Risk Prediction for Alzheimer's Disease. %A Chouraki, Vincent %A Reitz, Christiane %A Maury, Fleur %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bellenguez, Céline %A Yu, Lei %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Mukherjee, Shubhabrata %A Adams, Hieab H %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Larson, Eric B %A Fitzpatrick, Annette %A Uitterlinden, André G %A De Jager, Philip L %A Hofman, Albert %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Vardarajan, Badri %A Ibrahim-Verbaas, Carla %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Lopez, Oscar %A Dartigues, Jean-François %A Berr, Claudine %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Bennett, David A %A van Duijn, Cornelia %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Launer, Lenore J %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Crane, Paul K %A Lambert, Jean-Charles %A Mayeux, Richard %A Seshadri, Sudha %X

Effective prevention of Alzheimer's disease (AD) requires the development of risk prediction tools permitting preclinical intervention. We constructed a genetic risk score (GRS) comprising common genetic variants associated with AD, evaluated its association with incident AD and assessed its capacity to improve risk prediction over traditional models based on age, sex, education, and APOEɛ4. In eight prospective cohorts included in the International Genomics of Alzheimer's Project (IGAP), we derived weighted sum of risk alleles from the 19 top SNPs reported by the IGAP GWAS in participants aged 65 and older without prevalent dementia. Hazard ratios (HR) of incident AD were estimated in Cox models. Improvement in risk prediction was measured by the difference in C-index (Δ-C), the integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) and continuous net reclassification improvement (NRI>0). Overall, 19,687 participants at risk were included, of whom 2,782 developed AD. The GRS was associated with a 17% increase in AD risk (pooled HR = 1.17; 95% CI =   [1.13-1.21] per standard deviation increase in GRS; p-value =  2.86×10-16). This association was stronger among persons with at least one APOEɛ4 allele (HRGRS = 1.24; 95% CI =   [1.15-1.34]) than in others (HRGRS = 1.13; 95% CI =   [1.08-1.18]; pinteraction = 3.45×10-2). Risk prediction after seven years of follow-up showed a small improvement when adding the GRS to age, sex, APOEɛ4, and education (Δ-Cindex =  0.0043 [0.0019-0.0067]). Similar patterns were observed for IDI and NRI>0. In conclusion, a risk score incorporating common genetic variation outside the APOEɛ4 locus improved AD risk prediction and may facilitate risk stratification for prevention trials.

%B J Alzheimers Dis %V 53 %P 921-32 %8 2016 Jun 18 %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27340842?dopt=Abstract %R 10.3233/JAD-150749 %0 Journal Article %J Eur J Hum Genet %D 2016 %T Genetic variants in RBFOX3 are associated with sleep latency. %A Amin, Najaf %A Allebrandt, Karla V %A van der Spek, Ashley %A Müller-Myhsok, Bertram %A Hek, Karin %A Teder-Laving, Maris %A Hayward, Caroline %A Esko, Tõnu %A van Mill, Josine G %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A Watson, Nathaniel F %A Melville, Scott A %A Del Greco, Fabiola M %A Byrne, Enda M %A Oole, Edwin %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Chen, Ting-Hsu %A Evans, Daniel S %A Coresh, Josef %A Vogelzangs, Nicole %A Karjalainen, Juha %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Gharib, Sina A %A Zgaga, Lina %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Stone, Katie L %A Campbell, Harry %A Brouwer, Rutger Ww %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Dogas, Zoran %A Marciante, Kristin D %A Campbell, Susan %A Borovecki, Fran %A Luik, Annemarie I %A Li, Man %A Hottenga, Jouke Jan %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A van den Hout, Mirjam Cgn %A Cummings, Steven R %A Aulchenko, Yurii S %A Gehrman, Philip R %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wichmann, Heinz-Erich %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Fehrmann, Rudolf Sn %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Hofman, Albert %A Kao, Wen Hong Linda %A Oostra, Ben A %A Wright, Alan F %A Vink, Jacqueline M %A Wilson, James F %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Punjabi, Naresh M %A Redline, Susan %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Heath, Andrew C %A Merrow, Martha %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Gottlieb, Daniel J %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Rudan, Igor %A Tiemeier, Henning %A van IJcken, Wilfred Fj %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Metspalu, Andres %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Franke, Lude %A Roenneberg, Till %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %X

Time to fall asleep (sleep latency) is a major determinant of sleep quality. Chronic, long sleep latency is a major characteristic of sleep-onset insomnia and/or delayed sleep phase syndrome. In this study we aimed to discover common polymorphisms that contribute to the genetics of sleep latency. We performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) including 2 572 737 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) established in seven European cohorts including 4242 individuals. We found a cluster of three highly correlated variants (rs9900428, rs9907432 and rs7211029) in the RNA-binding protein fox-1 homolog 3 gene (RBFOX3) associated with sleep latency (P-values=5.77 × 10(-08), 6.59 × 10(-)(08) and 9.17 × 10(-)(08)). These SNPs were replicated in up to 12 independent populations including 30 377 individuals (P-values=1.5 × 10(-)(02), 7.0 × 10(-)(03) and 2.5 × 10(-)(03); combined meta-analysis P-values=5.5 × 10(-07), 5.4 × 10(-07) and 1.0 × 10(-07)). A functional prediction of RBFOX3 based on co-expression with other genes shows that this gene is predominantly expressed in brain (P-value=1.4 × 10(-316)) and the central nervous system (P-value=7.5 × 10(-)(321)). The predicted function of RBFOX3 based on co-expression analysis with other genes shows that this gene is significantly involved in the release cycle of neurotransmitters including gamma-aminobutyric acid and various monoamines (P-values<2.9 × 10(-11)) that are crucial in triggering the onset of sleep. To conclude, in this first large-scale GWAS of sleep latency we report a novel association of variants in RBFOX3 gene. Further, a functional prediction of RBFOX3 supports the involvement of RBFOX3 with sleep latency.

%B Eur J Hum Genet %V 24 %P 1488-95 %8 2016 Oct %G eng %N 10 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27142678?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1038/ejhg.2016.31 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2016 %T Genome-Wide Association Study for Incident Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart Disease in Prospective Cohort Studies: The CHARGE Consortium. %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Bis, Joshua C %A White, Charles C %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Trompet, Stella %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Lumley, Thomas %A Völker, Uwe %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Jensen, Majken K %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Girman, Cynthia J %A Ford, Ian %A Dörr, Marcus %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Franceschini, Nora %A Carty, Cara L %A Virtamo, Jarmo %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Arveiler, Dominique %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Ferrieres, Jean %A Ducimetiere, Pierre %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Wang, Ying A %A Siscovick, David S %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Wiklund, Per-Gunnar %A Taylor, Kent D %A Evans, Alun %A Kee, Frank %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Karvanen, Juha %A Kuulasmaa, Kari %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Kraft, Peter %A Launer, Lenore J %A Hofman, Albert %A Markus, Marcello R P %A Rose, Lynda M %A Silander, Kaisa %A Wagner, Peter %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Lohman, Kurt %A Stott, David J %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Harris, Tamara B %A Levy, Daniel %A Liu, Yongmei %A Rimm, Eric B %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Völzke, Henry %A Ridker, Paul M %A Blankenberg, Stefan %A Franco, Oscar H %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K Aged %K Cohort Studies %K Cooperative Behavior %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Female %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Myocardial Infarction %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prospective Studies %X

BACKGROUND: Data are limited on genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for incident coronary heart disease (CHD). Moreover, it is not known whether genetic variants identified to date also associate with risk of CHD in a prospective setting.

METHODS: We performed a two-stage GWAS analysis of incident myocardial infarction (MI) and CHD in a total of 64,297 individuals (including 3898 MI cases, 5465 CHD cases). SNPs that passed an arbitrary threshold of 5×10-6 in Stage I were taken to Stage II for further discovery. Furthermore, in an analysis of prognosis, we studied whether known SNPs from former GWAS were associated with total mortality in individuals who experienced MI during follow-up.

RESULTS: In Stage I 15 loci passed the threshold of 5×10-6; 8 loci for MI and 8 loci for CHD, for which one locus overlapped and none were reported in previous GWAS meta-analyses. We took 60 SNPs representing these 15 loci to Stage II of discovery. Four SNPs near QKI showed nominally significant association with MI (p-value<8.8×10-3) and three exceeded the genome-wide significance threshold when Stage I and Stage II results were combined (top SNP rs6941513: p = 6.2×10-9). Despite excellent power, the 9p21 locus SNP (rs1333049) was only modestly associated with MI (HR = 1.09, p-value = 0.02) and marginally with CHD (HR = 1.06, p-value = 0.08). Among an inception cohort of those who experienced MI during follow-up, the risk allele of rs1333049 was associated with a decreased risk of subsequent mortality (HR = 0.90, p-value = 3.2×10-3).

CONCLUSIONS: QKI represents a novel locus that may serve as a predictor of incident CHD in prospective studies. The association of the 9p21 locus both with increased risk of first myocardial infarction and longer survival after MI highlights the importance of study design in investigating genetic determinants of complex disorders.

%B PLoS One %V 11 %P e0144997 %8 2016 %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26950853?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0144997 %0 Journal Article %J Aging Cell %D 2016 %T GWAS analysis of handgrip and lower body strength in older adults in the CHARGE consortium. %A Matteini, Amy M %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Karasik, David %A Atzmon, Gil %A Chou, Wen-Chi %A Eicher, John D %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Arnold, Alice M %A Callisaya, Michele L %A Davies, Gail %A Evans, Daniel S %A Holtfreter, Birte %A Lohman, Kurt %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Mangino, Massimo %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Teumer, Alexander %A Yu, Lei %A Arking, Dan E %A Buchman, Aron S %A Chibinik, Lori B %A De Jager, Philip L %A Evans, Denis A %A Faul, Jessica D %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Gillham-Nasenya, Irina %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Hsu, Yi-Hsiang %A Ittermann, Till %A Lahousse, Lies %A Liewald, David C %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lopez, Lorna %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Siggeirsdottir, Kristin %A Starr, John M %A Thomson, Russell %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Weir, David R %A Yaffe, Kristine %A Zhao, Wei %A Zhuang, Wei Vivian %A Zmuda, Joseph M %A Bennett, David A %A Cummings, Steven R %A Deary, Ian J %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Harris, Tamara B %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kocher, Thomas %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Spector, Timothy D %A Srikanth, Velandai K %A Windham, B Gwen %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Newman, Anne B %A Walston, Jeremy D %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Murabito, Joanne M %X

Decline in muscle strength with aging is an important predictor of health trajectory in the elderly. Several factors, including genetics, are proposed contributors to variability in muscle strength. To identify genetic contributors to muscle strength, a meta-analysis of genomewide association studies of handgrip was conducted. Grip strength was measured using a handheld dynamometer in 27 581 individuals of European descent over 65 years of age from 14 cohort studies. Genomewide association analysis was conducted on ~2.7 million imputed and genotyped variants (SNPs). Replication of the most significant findings was conducted using data from 6393 individuals from three cohorts. GWAS of lower body strength was also characterized in a subset of cohorts. Two genomewide significant (P-value< 5 × 10(-8) ) and 39 suggestive (P-value< 5 × 10(-5) ) associations were observed from meta-analysis of the discovery cohorts. After meta-analysis with replication cohorts, genomewide significant association was observed for rs752045 on chromosome 8 (β = 0.47, SE = 0.08, P-value = 5.20 × 10(-10) ). This SNP is mapped to an intergenic region and is located within an accessible chromatin region (DNase hypersensitivity site) in skeletal muscle myotubes differentiated from the human skeletal muscle myoblasts cell line. This locus alters a binding motif of the CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-β (CEBPB) that is implicated in muscle repair mechanisms. GWAS of lower body strength did not yield significant results. A common genetic variant in a chromosomal region that regulates myotube differentiation and muscle repair may contribute to variability in grip strength in the elderly. Further studies are needed to uncover the mechanisms that link this genetic variant with muscle strength.

%B Aging Cell %V 15 %P 792-800 %8 2016 Oct %G eng %N 5 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27325353?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1111/acel.12468 %0 Journal Article %J Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A %D 2016 %T KLB is associated with alcohol drinking, and its gene product β-Klotho is necessary for FGF21 regulation of alcohol preference. %A Schumann, Gunter %A Liu, Chunyu %A O'Reilly, Paul %A Gao, He %A Song, Parkyong %A Xu, Bing %A Ruggeri, Barbara %A Amin, Najaf %A Jia, Tianye %A Preis, Sarah %A Segura Lepe, Marcelo %A Akira, Shizuo %A Barbieri, Caterina %A Baumeister, Sebastian %A Cauchi, Stephane %A Clarke, Toni-Kim %A Enroth, Stefan %A Fischer, Krista %A Hällfors, Jenni %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hieber, Saskia %A Hofer, Edith %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Johansson, Asa %A Joshi, Peter K %A Kaartinen, Niina %A Laitinen, Jaana %A Lemaitre, Rozenn %A Loukola, Anu %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Mangino, Massimo %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Moayyeri, Alireza %A Mukamal, Kenneth %A Nelson, Christopher %A Nettleton, Jennifer %A Partinen, Eemil %A Rawal, Rajesh %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rose, Lynda %A Sala, Cinzia %A Satoh, Takashi %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schraut, Katharina %A Scott, Robert %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Starr, John M %A Teumer, Alexander %A Trompet, Stella %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Venturini, Cristina %A Vergnaud, Anne-Claire %A Verweij, Niek %A Vitart, Veronique %A Vuckovic, Dragana %A Wedenoja, Juho %A Yengo, Loic %A Yu, Bing %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Chambers, John %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Daniela, Toniolo %A de Geus, Eco %A Deary, Ian %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Esko, Tõnu %A Eulenburg, Volker %A Franco, Oscar H %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gieger, Christian %A Grabe, Hans J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa %A Heath, Andrew C %A Hocking, Lynne %A Hofman, Albert %A Huth, Cornelia %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lahti, Jari %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liu, Yongmei %A Madden, Pamela A F %A Martin, Nicholas %A Morrison, Alanna %A Penninx, Brenda %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Psaty, Bruce %A Raitakari, Olli %A Ridker, Paul %A Rose, Richard %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Schmidt, Helena %A Spector, Tim D %A Stott, David %A Strachan, David %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Whitfield, John B %A Wilson, James %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce %A Bakalkin, Georgy %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Liu, Yun %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Desrivières, Sylvane %A Kliewer, Steven A %A Mangelsdorf, David J %A Müller, Christian P %A Levy, Daniel %A Elliott, Paul %X

Excessive alcohol consumption is a major public health problem worldwide. Although drinking habits are known to be inherited, few genes have been identified that are robustly linked to alcohol drinking. We conducted a genome-wide association metaanalysis and replication study among >105,000 individuals of European ancestry and identified β-Klotho (KLB) as a locus associated with alcohol consumption (rs11940694; P = 9.2 × 10(-12)). β-Klotho is an obligate coreceptor for the hormone FGF21, which is secreted from the liver and implicated in macronutrient preference in humans. We show that brain-specific β-Klotho KO mice have an increased alcohol preference and that FGF21 inhibits alcohol drinking by acting on the brain. These data suggest that a liver-brain endocrine axis may play an important role in the regulation of alcohol drinking behavior and provide a unique pharmacologic target for reducing alcohol consumption.

%B Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A %V 113 %P 14372-14377 %8 2016 Dec 13 %G eng %N 50 %R 10.1073/pnas.1611243113 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2016 %T Meta-analysis identifies common and rare variants influencing blood pressure and overlapping with metabolic trait loci. %A Liu, Chunyu %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Franceschini, Nora %A Bis, Joshua C %A Rice, Kenneth %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Lu, Yingchang %A Weiss, Stefan %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Palmas, Walter %A Martin, Lisa W %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Surendran, Praveen %A Drenos, Fotios %A Cook, James P %A Auer, Paul L %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Giri, Ayush %A Zhao, Wei %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Lin, Li-An %A Stafford, Jeanette M %A Amin, Najaf %A Mei, Hao %A Yao, Jie %A Voorman, Arend %A Larson, Martin G %A Grove, Megan L %A Smith, Albert V %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Chen, Han %A Huan, Tianxiao %A Kosova, Gulum %A Stitziel, Nathan O %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Samani, Nilesh %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Deloukas, Panos %A Li, Man %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Gorski, Mathias %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Papanicolaou, George J %A Rossouw, Jacques E %A Faul, Jessica D %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Bouchard, Claude %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Taylor, Kent D %A Liu, Kiang %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Gottesman, Omri %A Daw, E Warwick %A Giulianini, Franco %A Ganesh, Santhi %A Salfati, Elias %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Dörr, Marcus %A Felix, Stephan B %A Rettig, Rainer %A Völzke, Henry %A Kim, Eric %A Lee, Wen-Jane %A Lee, I-Te %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Tsosie, Krystal S %A Edwards, Digna R Velez %A Liu, Yongmei %A Correa, Adolfo %A Weir, David R %A Völker, Uwe %A Ridker, Paul M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Reiner, Alexander P %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Edwards, Todd L %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Fornage, Myriam %A Ehret, Georg B %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Levy, Daniel %A Chasman, Daniel I %X

Meta-analyses of association results for blood pressure using exome-centric single-variant and gene-based tests identified 31 new loci in a discovery stage among 146,562 individuals, with follow-up and meta-analysis in 180,726 additional individuals (total n = 327,288). These blood pressure-associated loci are enriched for known variants for cardiometabolic traits. Associations were also observed for the aggregation of rare and low-frequency missense variants in three genes, NPR1, DBH, and PTPMT1. In addition, blood pressure associations at 39 previously reported loci were confirmed. The identified variants implicate biological pathways related to cardiometabolic traits, vascular function, and development. Several new variants are inferred to have roles in transcription or as hubs in protein-protein interaction networks. Genetic risk scores constructed from the identified variants were strongly associated with coronary disease and myocardial infarction. This large collection of blood pressure-associated loci suggests new therapeutic strategies for hypertension, emphasizing a link with cardiometabolic risk.

%B Nat Genet %V 48 %P 1162-70 %8 2016 Oct %G eng %N 10 %R 10.1038/ng.3660 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2016 %T A meta-analysis of 120 246 individuals identifies 18 new loci for fibrinogen concentration. %A de Vries, Paul S %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Steri, Maristella %A Tang, Weihong %A Teumer, Alexander %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Grossmann, Vera %A Hottenga, Jouke J %A Trompet, Stella %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Auer, Paul L %A Attia, John R %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Lahti, Jari %A Venturini, Cristina %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Joshi, Peter K %A Rocanin-Arjo, Ares %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Navarro, Pau %A Rose, Lynda M %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Riess, Helene %A Mazur, Johanna %A Basu, Saonli %A Goel, Anuj %A Yang, Qiong %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Rumley, Ann %A Fiorillo, Edoardo %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Grotevendt, Anne %A Scott, Robert %A Taylor, Kent D %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Yao, Jie %A Kifley, Annette %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Qayyum, Rehan %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Berentzen, Tina L %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Mangino, Massimo %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Wild, Sarah %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Wright, Alan F %A Marten, Jonathan %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Tofler, Geoffrey %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Lowe, Gordon D %A Zoledziewska, Magdalena %A Sattar, Naveed %A Binder, Harald %A Völker, Uwe %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A McKnight, Barbara %A Huang, Jie %A Jenny, Nancy S %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Qi, Lihong %A Mcevoy, Mark G %A Becker, Diane M %A Starr, John M %A Sarin, Antti-Pekka %A Hysi, Pirro G %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Jhun, Min A %A Campbell, Harry %A Hamsten, Anders %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Zeller, Tanja %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Haritunians, Talin %A Liu, Jingmin %A Palotie, Aarno %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Stott, David J %A Hofman, Albert %A Franco, Oscar H %A Polasek, Ozren %A Rudan, Igor %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Wilson, James F %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Spector, Tim D %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Hansen, Torben %A Deary, Ian J %A Becker, Lewis C %A Scott, Rodney J %A Mitchell, Paul %A März, Winfried %A Wareham, Nick J %A Peters, Annette %A Greinacher, Andreas %A Wild, Philipp S %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Hayward, Caroline %A Cucca, Francesco %A Tracy, Russell %A Watkins, Hugh %A Reiner, Alex P %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Ridker, Paul M %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Strachan, David P %A Dehghan, Abbas %X

Genome-wide association studies have previously identified 23 genetic loci associated with circulating fibrinogen concentration. These studies used HapMap imputation and did not examine the X-chromosome. 1000 Genomes imputation provides better coverage of uncommon variants, and includes indels. We conducted a genome-wide association analysis of 34 studies imputed to the 1000 Genomes Project reference panel and including ∼120 000 participants of European ancestry (95 806 participants with data on the X-chromosome). Approximately 10.7 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms and 1.2 million indels were examined. We identified 41 genome-wide significant fibrinogen loci; of which, 18 were newly identified. There were no genome-wide significant signals on the X-chromosome. The lead variants of five significant loci were indels. We further identified six additional independent signals, including three rare variants, at two previously characterized loci: FGB and IRF1. Together the 41 loci explain 3% of the variance in plasma fibrinogen concentration.

%B Hum Mol Genet %V 25 %P 358-70 %8 2016 Jan 15 %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26561523?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1093/hmg/ddv454 %0 Journal Article %J J Med Genet %D 2016 %T Meta-analysis of 49 549 individuals imputed with the 1000 Genomes Project reveals an exonic damaging variant in ANGPTL4 determining fasting TG levels. %A van Leeuwen, Elisabeth M %A Sabo, Aniko %A Bis, Joshua C %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Smith, Albert V %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Joshi, Peter K %A Duan, Qing %A Marten, Jonathan %A van Klinken, Jan B %A Surakka, Ida %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Zhang, Weihua %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Trompet, Stella %A Verweij, Niek %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Deelen, Joris %A van der Most, Peter J %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Arking, Dan E %A Morrison, Alanna %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Franco, Oscar H %A Hofman, Albert %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Sijbrands, Eric J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Campbell, Archie %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Rice, Kenneth M %A White, Charles C %A Harris, Tamara %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Campbell, Harry %A Lange, Leslie A %A Rudan, Igor %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Navarro, Pau %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Kooner, Angad S %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Scott, William R %A Tan, Sian-Tsung %A de Geus, Eco J %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Ford, Ian %A Gansevoort, Ron T %A Segura-Lepe, Marcelo P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Viikari, Jorma S %A Nikus, Kjell %A Forrester, Terrence %A McKenzie, Colin A %A de Craen, Anton J M %A de Ruijter, Hester M %A Pasterkamp, Gerard %A Snieder, Harold %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Cooper, Richard S %A Kähönen, Mika %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Elliott, Paul %A van der Harst, Pim %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Chambers, John C %A Swertz, Morris %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Willems van Dijk, Ko %A Vitart, Veronique %A Polasek, Ozren %A Hayward, Caroline %A Wilson, James G %A Wilson, James F %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Rich, Stephen S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %X

BACKGROUND: So far, more than 170 loci have been associated with circulating lipid levels through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). These associations are largely driven by common variants, their function is often not known, and many are likely to be markers for the causal variants. In this study we aimed to identify more new rare and low-frequency functional variants associated with circulating lipid levels.

METHODS: We used the 1000 Genomes Project as a reference panel for the imputations of GWAS data from ∼60 000 individuals in the discovery stage and ∼90 000 samples in the replication stage.

RESULTS: Our study resulted in the identification of five new associations with circulating lipid levels at four loci. All four loci are within genes that can be linked biologically to lipid metabolism. One of the variants, rs116843064, is a damaging missense variant within the ANGPTL4 gene.

CONCLUSIONS: This study illustrates that GWAS with high-scale imputation may still help us unravel the biological mechanism behind circulating lipid levels.

%B J Med Genet %V 53 %P 441-9 %8 2016 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27036123?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1136/jmedgenet-2015-103439 %0 Journal Article %J J Med Genet %D 2016 %T Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of HDL cholesterol response to statins. %A Postmus, Iris %A Warren, Helen R %A Trompet, Stella %A Arsenault, Benoit J %A Avery, Christy L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Chasman, Daniel I %A de Keyser, Catherine E %A Deshmukh, Harshal A %A Evans, Daniel S %A Feng, QiPing %A Li, Xiaohui %A Smit, Roelof A J %A Smith, Albert V %A Sun, Fangui %A Taylor, Kent D %A Arnold, Alice M %A Barnes, Michael R %A Barratt, Bryan J %A Betteridge, John %A Boekholdt, S Matthijs %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Chen, Y-D Ida %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Cummings, Steven R %A Denny, Joshua C %A Dubé, Marie Pierre %A Durrington, Paul N %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Ford, Ian %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hofman, Albert %A Hovingh, G Kees %A Kastelein, John J P %A Launer, Leonore J %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lumley, Thomas %A McKeigue, Paul M %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Neil, Andrew %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Nyberg, Fredrik %A O'Brien, Eoin %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Post, Wendy %A Poulter, Neil %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Sattar, Naveed %A Sever, Peter %A Shaw-Hawkins, Sue %A Shields, Denis C %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Smith, Joshua D %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stanton, Alice %A Stott, David J %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Stürmer, Til %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wei, Wei-Qi %A Westendorp, Rudi G J %A Whitsel, Eric A %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Wilke, Russell A %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Colhoun, Helen M %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Franco, Oscar H %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hitman, Graham %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Stafford, Jeanette M %A Stein, Charles M %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Krauss, Ronald M %X

BACKGROUND: In addition to lowering low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), statin therapy also raises high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. Inter-individual variation in HDL-C response to statins may be partially explained by genetic variation.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to identify variants with an effect on statin-induced high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) changes. The 123 most promising signals with p<1×10(-4) from the 16 769 statin-treated participants in the first analysis stage were followed up in an independent group of 10 951 statin-treated individuals, providing a total sample size of 27 720 individuals. The only associations of genome-wide significance (p<5×10(-8)) were between minor alleles at the CETP locus and greater HDL-C response to statin treatment.

CONCLUSIONS: Based on results from this study that included a relatively large sample size, we suggest that CETP may be the only detectable locus with common genetic variants that influence HDL-C response to statins substantially in individuals of European descent. Although CETP is known to be associated with HDL-C, we provide evidence that this pharmacogenetic effect is independent of its association with baseline HDL-C levels.

%B J Med Genet %V 53 %P 835-845 %8 2016 Dec %G eng %N 12 %R 10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-103966 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2016 %T Multiethnic Exome-Wide Association Study of Subclinical Atherosclerosis. %A Natarajan, Pradeep %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Cox, Amanda J %A Dörr, Marcus %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Franceschini, Nora %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Jhun, Min A %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Schminke, Ulf %A Stitziel, Nathan O %A Tada, Hayato %A van Setten, Jessica %A Smith, Albert V %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Yao, Jie %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Amin, Najaf %A Baber, Usman %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Carr, J Jeffrey %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A de Jong, Pim A %A de Koning, Harry %A de Vos, Bob D %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Fuster, Valentin %A Franco, Oscar H %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Hoffmann, Udo %A Hofman, Albert %A Išgum, Ivana %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kral, Brian G %A Launer, Lenore J %A Massaro, Joseph %A Mehran, Roxana %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Mosley, Thomas H %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Newman, Anne B %A Nguyen, Khanh-Dung %A North, Kari E %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Oudkerk, Matthijs %A Pankow, James S %A Peloso, Gina M %A Post, Wendy %A Province, Michael A %A Raffield, Laura M %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reilly, Dermot F %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rosendaal, Frits %A Sartori, Samantha %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Trompet, Stella %A Turner, Stephen T %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A van der Lugt, Aad %A Völker, Uwe %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Wassel, Christina L %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Becker, Diane M %A Becker, Lewis C %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bowden, Donald W %A Deary, Ian J %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Felix, Stephan B %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Mathias, Rasika %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rader, Daniel J %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Wilson, James G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Völzke, Henry %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Peyser, Patricia A %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %X

BACKGROUND: -The burden of subclinical atherosclerosis in asymptomatic individuals is heritable and associated with elevated risk of developing clinical coronary heart disease (CHD). We sought to identify genetic variants in protein-coding regions associated with subclinical atherosclerosis and the risk of subsequent CHD.

METHODS AND RESULTS: -We studied a total of 25,109 European ancestry and African-American participants with coronary artery calcification (CAC) measured by cardiac computed tomography and 52,869 with common carotid intima media thickness (CIMT) measured by ultrasonography within the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium. Participants were genotyped for 247,870 DNA sequence variants (231,539 in exons) across the genome. A meta-analysis of exome-wide association studies was performed across cohorts for CAC and CIMT. APOB p.Arg3527Gln was associated with four-fold excess CAC (P = 3×10(-10)). The APOE ε2 allele (p.Arg176Cys) was associated with both 22.3% reduced CAC (P = 1×10(-12)) and 1.4% reduced CIMT (P = 4×10(-14)) in carriers compared with non-carriers. In secondary analyses conditioning on LDL cholesterol concentration, the ε2 protective association with CAC, although attenuated, remained strongly significant. Additionally, the presence of ε2 was associated with reduced risk for CHD (OR 0.77; P = 1×10(-11)).

CONCLUSIONS: -Exome-wide association meta-analysis demonstrates that protein-coding variants in APOB and APOE associate with subclinical atherosclerosis. APOE ε2 represents the first significant association for multiple subclinical atherosclerosis traits across multiple ethnicities as well as clinical CHD.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %8 2016 Nov 21 %G eng %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.116.001572 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Cardiovasc Genet %D 2016 %T Novel Genetic Loci Associated With Retinal Microvascular Diameter. %A Jensen, Richard A %A Sim, Xueling %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Li, Xiaohui %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Cotch, Mary Frances %A McKnight, Barbara %A Klein, Ronald %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Kifley, Annette %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Taylor, Kent D %A Klein, Barbara E K %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Li, Xiang %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Klaver, Caroline C %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Mutlu, Unal %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Liu, Chunyu %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Mitchell, Paul %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Wong, Tien Y %X

BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence that retinal microvascular diameters are associated with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular conditions. The shared genetic effects of these associations are currently unknown. The aim of this study was to increase our understanding of the genetic factors that mediate retinal vessel size.

METHODS AND RESULTS: This study extends previous genome-wide association study results using 24 000+ multiethnic participants from 7 discovery cohorts and 5000+ subjects of European ancestry from 2 replication cohorts. Using the Illumina HumanExome BeadChip, we investigate the association of single-nucleotide polymorphisms and variants collectively across genes with summary measures of retinal vessel diameters, referred to as the central retinal venule equivalent and the central retinal arteriole equivalent. We report 4 new loci associated with central retinal venule equivalent, one of which is also associated with central retinal arteriole equivalent. The 4 single-nucleotide polymorphisms are rs7926971 in TEAD1 (P=3.1×10(-) (11); minor allele frequency=0.43), rs201259422 in TSPAN10 (P=4.4×10(-9); minor allele frequency=0.27), rs5442 in GNB3 (P=7.0×10(-10); minor allele frequency=0.05), and rs1800407 in OCA2 (P=3.4×10(-8); minor allele frequency=0.05). The latter single-nucleotide polymorphism, rs1800407, was also associated with central retinal arteriole equivalent (P=6.5×10(-12)). Results from the gene-based burden tests were null. In phenotype look-ups, single-nucleotide polymorphism rs201255422 was associated with both systolic (P=0.001) and diastolic blood pressures (P=8.3×10(-04)).

CONCLUSIONS: Our study expands the understanding of genetic factors influencing the size of the retinal microvasculature. These findings may also provide insight into the relationship between retinal and systemic microvascular disease.

%B Circ Cardiovasc Genet %V 9 %P 45-54 %8 2016 Feb %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26567291?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.115.001142 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2016 %T Platelet-Related Variants Identified by Exomechip Meta-analysis in 157,293 Individuals. %A Eicher, John D %A Chami, Nathalie %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Nomura, Akihiro %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Schick, Ursula M %A Slater, Andrew J %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Polfus, Linda %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Giri, Ayush %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Lange, Leslie A %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Hill, W David %A Pazoki, Raha %A Elliot, Paul %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Gao, He %A Vergnaud, Anne-Claire %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Becker, Diane M %A Becker, Lewis C %A Burt, Amber %A Crosslin, David R %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nikus, Kjell %A Hernesniemi, Jussi %A Kähönen, Mika %A Raitoharju, Emma %A Mononen, Nina %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Cushman, Mary %A Zakai, Neil A %A Nickerson, Deborah A %A Raffield, Laura M %A Quarells, Rakale %A Willer, Cristen J %A Peloso, Gina M %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Liu, Dajiang J %A Deloukas, Panos %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Fornage, Myriam %A Richard, Melissa %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Rioux, John D %A Dubé, Marie-Pierre %A de Denus, Simon %A Lu, Yingchang %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Velez Edwards, Digna R %A Torstenson, Eric S %A Liu, Yongmei %A Tracy, Russell P %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rich, Stephen S %A Highland, Heather M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Li, Jin %A Lange, Ethan %A Wilson, James G %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Mägi, Reedik %A Hirschhorn, Joel %A Metspalu, Andres %A Esko, Tõnu %A Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina %A Nalls, Mike A %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Evans, Michele K %A Engström, Gunnar %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Melander, Olle %A O'Donoghue, Michelle L %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Wallentin, Lars %A White, Harvey D %A Floyd, James S %A Bartz, Traci M %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Starr, J M %A Liewald, David C M %A Hayward, Caroline %A Deary, Ian J %A Greinacher, Andreas %A Völker, Uwe %A Thiele, Thomas %A Völzke, Henry %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Edwards, Todd L %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Faraday, Nauder %A Auer, Paul L %A Reiner, Alex P %A Lettre, Guillaume %A Johnson, Andrew D %X

Platelet production, maintenance, and clearance are tightly controlled processes indicative of platelets' important roles in hemostasis and thrombosis. Platelets are common targets for primary and secondary prevention of several conditions. They are monitored clinically by complete blood counts, specifically with measurements of platelet count (PLT) and mean platelet volume (MPV). Identifying genetic effects on PLT and MPV can provide mechanistic insights into platelet biology and their role in disease. Therefore, we formed the Blood Cell Consortium (BCX) to perform a large-scale meta-analysis of Exomechip association results for PLT and MPV in 157,293 and 57,617 individuals, respectively. Using the low-frequency/rare coding variant-enriched Exomechip genotyping array, we sought to identify genetic variants associated with PLT and MPV. In addition to confirming 47 known PLT and 20 known MPV associations, we identified 32 PLT and 18 MPV associations not previously observed in the literature across the allele frequency spectrum, including rare large effect (FCER1A), low-frequency (IQGAP2, MAP1A, LY75), and common (ZMIZ2, SMG6, PEAR1, ARFGAP3/PACSIN2) variants. Several variants associated with PLT/MPV (PEAR1, MRVI1, PTGES3) were also associated with platelet reactivity. In concurrent BCX analyses, there was overlap of platelet-associated variants with red (MAP1A, TMPRSS6, ZMIZ2) and white (PEAR1, ZMIZ2, LY75) blood cell traits, suggesting common regulatory pathways with shared genetic architecture among these hematopoietic lineages. Our large-scale Exomechip analyses identified previously undocumented associations with platelet traits and further indicate that several complex quantitative hematological, lipid, and cardiovascular traits share genetic factors.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 99 %P 40-55 %8 2016 Jul 7 %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27346686?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.05.005 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2016 %T A principal component meta-analysis on multiple anthropometric traits identifies novel loci for body shape. %A Ried, Janina S %A Jeff M, Janina %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Bragg-Gresham, Jennifer L %A van Dongen, Jenny %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Cadby, Gemma %A Eklund, Niina %A Eriksson, Joel %A Esko, Tõnu %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Goel, Anuj %A Gorski, Mathias %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heard-Costa, Nancy L %A Jackson, Anne U %A Jokinen, Eero %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Lahti, Jari %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mägi, Reedik %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Mangino, Massimo %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Monda, Keri L %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Perusse, Louis %A Prokopenko, Inga %A Qi, Lu %A Rose, Lynda M %A Salvi, Erika %A Smith, Megan T %A Snieder, Harold %A Stančáková, Alena %A Ju Sung, Yun %A Tachmazidou, Ioanna %A Teumer, Alexander %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A van der Harst, Pim %A Walker, Ryan W %A Wang, Sophie R %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willems, Sara M %A Wong, Andrew %A Zhang, Weihua %A Albrecht, Eva %A Couto Alves, Alexessander %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Barlassina, Cristina %A Bartz, Traci M %A Beilby, John %A Bellis, Claire %A Bergman, Richard N %A Bergmann, Sven %A Blangero, John %A Blüher, Matthias %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bonnycastle, Lori L %A Bornstein, Stefan R %A Bruinenberg, Marcel %A Campbell, Harry %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Chiang, Charleston W K %A Chines, Peter S %A Collins, Francis S %A Cucca, Fracensco %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A D'Avila, Francesca %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Dedoussis, George %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Döring, Angela %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Farmaki, Aliki-Eleni %A Farrall, Martin %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Fischer, Krista %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Friedrich, Nele %A Gjesing, Anette Prior %A Glorioso, Nicola %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Grallert, Harald %A Grarup, Niels %A Gräßler, Jürgen %A Grewal, Jagvir %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harder, Marie Neergaard %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Hassinen, Maija %A Hastie, Nicholas %A Hattersley, Andrew Tym %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Heliövaara, Markku %A Hillege, Hans %A Hofman, Albert %A Holmen, Oddgeir %A Homuth, Georg %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Hui, Jennie %A Husemoen, Lise Lotte %A Hysi, Pirro G %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Ittermann, Till %A Jalilzadeh, Shapour %A James, Alan L %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Jula, Antti %A Marie Justesen, Johanne %A Justice, Anne E %A Kähönen, Mika %A Karaleftheri, Maria %A Tee Khaw, Kay %A Keinanen-Kiukaanniemi, Sirkka M %A Kinnunen, Leena %A Knekt, Paul B %A Koistinen, Heikki A %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooner, Ishminder K %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Kovacs, Peter %A Kyriakou, Theodosios %A Laitinen, Tomi %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Lewin, Alexandra M %A Lichtner, Peter %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Lindström, Jaana %A Linneberg, Allan %A Lorbeer, Roberto %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Luben, Robert %A Lyssenko, Valeriya %A Männistö, Satu %A Manunta, Paolo %A Leach, Irene Mateo %A McArdle, Wendy L %A McKnight, Barbara %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Milani, Lili %A Mills, Rebecca %A Montasser, May E %A Morris, Andrew P %A Müller, Gabriele %A Musk, Arthur W %A Narisu, Narisu %A Ong, Ken K %A Oostra, Ben A %A Osmond, Clive %A Palotie, Aarno %A Pankow, James S %A Paternoster, Lavinia %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Pichler, Irene %A Pilia, Maria G %A Polasek, Ozren %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Rao, D C %A Rayner, Nigel W %A Ribel-Madsen, Rasmus %A Rice, Treva K %A Richards, Marcus %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Ryan, Kathy A %A Sanna, Serena %A Sarzynski, Mark A %A Scholtens, Salome %A Scott, Robert A %A Sebert, Sylvain %A Southam, Lorraine %A Sparsø, Thomas Hempel %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Stirrups, Kathleen %A Stolk, Ronald P %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Stringham, Heather M %A Swertz, Morris A %A Swift, Amy J %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tsafantakis, Emmanouil %A van der Most, Peter J %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Vartiainen, Erkki %A Venturini, Cristina %A Verweij, Niek %A Viikari, Jorma S %A Vitart, Veronique %A Vohl, Marie-Claude %A Vonk, Judith M %A Waeber, Gérard %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilsgaard, Tom %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Wright, Alan F %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Hua Zhao, Jing %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Bouchard, Claude %A Chambers, John C %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Cusi, Daniele %A Gansevoort, Ron T %A Gieger, Christian %A Hansen, Torben %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hu, Frank %A Hveem, Kristian %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Kajantie, Eero %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kuh, Diana %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Metspalu, Andres %A Njølstad, Inger %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Annette %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Puolijoki, Hannu %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Rudan, Igor %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Schwarz, Peter E H %A Shudiner, Alan R %A Smit, Jan H %A Sørensen, Thorkild I A %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Tremblay, Angelo %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Uusitupa, Matti %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wilson, James F %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Abecasis, Goncalo R %A Boehnke, Michael %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Deloukas, Panos %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Fox, Caroline %A Groop, Leif C %A Heid, Iris M %A Hunter, David J %A Kaplan, Robert C %A McCarthy, Mark I %A North, Kari E %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Schlessinger, David %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Strachan, David P %A Frayling, Timothy %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Loos, Ruth J F %K Anthropometry %K Body Size %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Humans %K Models, Genetic %K Principal Component Analysis %X

Large consortia have revealed hundreds of genetic loci associated with anthropometric traits, one trait at a time. We examined whether genetic variants affect body shape as a composite phenotype that is represented by a combination of anthropometric traits. We developed an approach that calculates averaged PCs (AvPCs) representing body shape derived from six anthropometric traits (body mass index, height, weight, waist and hip circumference, waist-to-hip ratio). The first four AvPCs explain >99% of the variability, are heritable, and associate with cardiometabolic outcomes. We performed genome-wide association analyses for each body shape composite phenotype across 65 studies and meta-analysed summary statistics. We identify six novel loci: LEMD2 and CD47 for AvPC1, RPS6KA5/C14orf159 and GANAB for AvPC3, and ARL15 and ANP32 for AvPC4. Our findings highlight the value of using multiple traits to define complex phenotypes for discovery, which are not captured by single-trait analyses, and may shed light onto new pathways.

%B Nat Commun %V 7 %P 13357 %8 2016 11 23 %G eng %R 10.1038/ncomms13357 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS Genet %D 2016 %T Rare Functional Variant in TM2D3 is Associated with Late-Onset Alzheimer's Disease. %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Bis, Joshua C %A Chouraki, Vincent %A Li-Kroeger, David %A Yamamoto, Shinya %A Grove, Megan L %A Naj, Adam %A Vronskaya, Maria %A Salazar, Jose L %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Smith, Albert V %A Amin, Najaf %A Sims, Rebecca %A Ibrahim-Verbaas, Carla A %A Choi, Seung-Hoan %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Beiser, Alexa %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Hayward, Caroline %A Varga, Tibor V %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Franks, Paul W %A Hallmans, Göran %A Rolandsson, Olov %A Jansson, Jan-Håkon %A Porteous, David J %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Bellen, Hugo J %A Levy, Daniel %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Emilsson, Valur %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Aspelund, Thor %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Launer, Lenore J %A Hofman, Albert %A Wang, Li-San %A Williams, Julie %A Schellenberg, Gerard D %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Shulman, Joshua M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %X

We performed an exome-wide association analysis in 1393 late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) cases and 8141 controls from the CHARGE consortium. We found that a rare variant (P155L) in TM2D3 was enriched in Icelanders (~0.5% versus <0.05% in other European populations). In 433 LOAD cases and 3903 controls from the Icelandic AGES sub-study, P155L was associated with increased risk and earlier onset of LOAD [odds ratio (95% CI) = 7.5 (3.5-15.9), p = 6.6x10-9]. Mutation in the Drosophila TM2D3 homolog, almondex, causes a phenotype similar to loss of Notch/Presenilin signaling. Human TM2D3 is capable of rescuing these phenotypes, but this activity is abolished by P155L, establishing it as a functionally damaging allele. Our results establish a rare TM2D3 variant in association with LOAD susceptibility, and together with prior work suggests possible links to the β-amyloid cascade.

%B PLoS Genet %V 12 %P e1006327 %8 2016 Oct %G eng %N 10 %R 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006327 %0 Journal Article %J J Am Soc Nephrol %D 2016 %T SOS2 and ACP1 Loci Identified through Large-Scale Exome Chip Analysis Regulate Kidney Development and Function. %A Li, Man %A Li, Yong %A Weeks, Olivia %A Mijatovic, Vladan %A Teumer, Alexander %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Tromp, Gerard %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Gorski, Mathias %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nutile, Teresa %A Sedaghat, Sanaz %A Sorice, Rossella %A Tin, Adrienne %A Yang, Qiong %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Arking, Dan E %A Bihlmeyer, Nathan A %A Böger, Carsten A %A Carroll, Robert J %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Faul, Jessica D %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Gambaro, Giovanni %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Giulianini, Franco %A Heid, Iris %A Huang, Jinyan %A Imboden, Medea %A Jackson, Anne U %A Jeff, Janina %A Jhun, Min A %A Katz, Ronit %A Kifley, Annette %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Kumar, Ashish %A Laakso, Markku %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Lohman, Kurt %A Lu, Yingchang %A Mägi, Reedik %A Malerba, Giovanni %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Robino, Antonietta %A Ruderfer, Douglas %A Salvi, Erika %A Schick, Ursula M %A Schulz, Christina-Alexandra %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Traglia, Michela %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Zhao, Wei %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Liu, Chunyu %A Wessel, Jennifer %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Bork-Jensen, Jette %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Braga, Daniele %A Brandslund, Ivan %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Campbell, Archie %A Carey, David J %A Christensen, Cramer %A Coresh, Josef %A Crook, Errol %A Curhan, Gary C %A Cusi, Daniele %A de Boer, Ian H %A de Vries, Aiko P J %A Denny, Joshua C %A Devuyst, Olivier %A Dreisbach, Albert W %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Esko, Tõnu %A Franco, Oscar H %A Fulop, Tibor %A Gerhard, Glenn S %A Glümer, Charlotte %A Gottesman, Omri %A Grarup, Niels %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hocking, Lynne %A Hofman, Albert %A Hu, Frank B %A Husemoen, Lise Lotte N %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Jørgensen, Marit E %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A König, Wolfgang %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Kriebel, Jennifer %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lauritzen, Torsten %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Levy, Daniel %A Linksted, Pamela %A Linneberg, Allan %A Liu, Yongmei %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lupo, Antonio %A Meisinger, Christine %A Melander, Olle %A Metspalu, Andres %A Mitchell, Paul %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nürnberg, Peter %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Parsa, Afshin %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Peters, Annette %A Peters, Ulrike %A Polasek, Ozren %A Porteous, David %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Qi, Lu %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reiner, Alex P %A Rettig, Rainer %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rossouw, Jacques E %A Schmidt, Frank %A Siscovick, David %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Turner, Stephen T %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Velayutham, Dinesh %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Weir, David R %A Witte, Daniel %A Kuivaniemi, Helena %A Fox, Caroline S %A Franceschini, Nora %A Goessling, Wolfram %A Köttgen, Anna %A Chu, Audrey Y %X

Genome-wide association studies have identified >50 common variants associated with kidney function, but these variants do not fully explain the variation in eGFR. We performed a two-stage meta-analysis of associations between genotypes from the Illumina exome array and eGFR on the basis of serum creatinine (eGFRcrea) among participants of European ancestry from the CKDGen Consortium (nStage1: 111,666; nStage2: 48,343). In single-variant analyses, we identified single nucleotide polymorphisms at seven new loci associated with eGFRcrea (PPM1J, EDEM3, ACP1, SPEG, EYA4, CYP1A1, and ATXN2L; PStage1<3.7×10(-7)), of which most were common and annotated as nonsynonymous variants. Gene-based analysis identified associations of functional rare variants in three genes with eGFRcrea, including a novel association with the SOS Ras/Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 2 gene, SOS2 (P=5.4×10(-8) by sequence kernel association test). Experimental follow-up in zebrafish embryos revealed changes in glomerular gene expression and renal tubule morphology in the embryonic kidney of acp1- and sos2-knockdowns. These developmental abnormalities associated with altered blood clearance rate and heightened prevalence of edema. This study expands the number of loci associated with kidney function and identifies novel genes with potential roles in kidney formation.

%B J Am Soc Nephrol %8 2016 Dec 05 %G eng %R 10.1681/ASN.2016020131 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2016 %T Whole-Exome Sequencing Identifies Loci Associated with Blood Cell Traits and Reveals a Role for Alternative GFI1B Splice Variants in Human Hematopoiesis. %A Polfus, Linda M %A Khajuria, Rajiv K %A Schick, Ursula M %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Pazoki, Raha %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Auer, Paul L %A Floyd, James S %A Huang, Jie %A Lange, Leslie %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Gibbs, Richard A %A Metcalf, Ginger %A Muzny, Donna %A Veeraraghavan, Narayanan %A Walter, Klaudia %A Chen, Lu %A Yanek, Lisa %A Becker, Lewis C %A Peloso, Gina M %A Wakabayashi, Aoi %A Kals, Mart %A Metspalu, Andres %A Esko, Tõnu %A Fox, Keolu %A Wallace, Robert %A Franceschini, Nora %A Matijevic, Nena %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Bartz, Traci M %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Kähönen, Mika %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Lettre, Guillaume %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Franco, Oscar H %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wilson, James G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Zhang, Xiaoling %A Johnson, Andrew D %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Johnsen, Jill M %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Ganesh, Santhi K %A Sankaran, Vijay G %B Am J Hum Genet %V 99 %P 785 %8 2016 Sep 01 %G eng %N 3 %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.08.002 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2017 %T Comparison of HapMap and 1000 Genomes Reference Panels in a Large-Scale Genome-Wide Association Study. %A de Vries, Paul S %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Trompet, Stella %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Teumer, Alexander %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Wang, Jie Jin %A Attia, John R %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Steri, Maristella %A Weng, Lu-Chen %A Pool, Rene %A Grossmann, Vera %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Venturini, Cristina %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Rose, Lynda M %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Mazur, Johanna %A Basu, Saonli %A Frånberg, Mattias %A Yang, Qiong %A Ligthart, Symen %A Hottenga, Jouke J %A Rumley, Ann %A Mulas, Antonella %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Grotevendt, Anne %A Taylor, Kent D %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Kifley, Annette %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Berentzen, Tina L %A Mangino, Massimo %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Hamsten, Anders %A Tofler, Geoffrey %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Draisma, Harmen H M %A Lowe, Gordon D %A Zoledziewska, Magdalena %A Sattar, Naveed %A Lackner, Karl J %A Völker, Uwe %A McKnight, Barbara %A Huang, Jie %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A McEvoy, Mark A %A Starr, John M %A Hysi, Pirro G %A Hernandez, Dena G %A Guan, Weihua %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Zeller, Tanja %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Stott, David J %A Binder, Harald %A Hofman, Albert %A Franco, Oscar H %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Spector, Tim D %A Deary, Ian J %A März, Winfried %A Greinacher, Andreas %A Wild, Philipp S %A Cucca, Francesco %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Watkins, Hugh %A Tang, Weihong %A Ridker, Paul M %A Jukema, Jan W %A Scott, Rodney J %A Mitchell, Paul %A Hansen, Torben %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Strachan, David P %A Dehghan, Abbas %X

An increasing number of genome-wide association (GWA) studies are now using the higher resolution 1000 Genomes Project reference panel (1000G) for imputation, with the expectation that 1000G imputation will lead to the discovery of additional associated loci when compared to HapMap imputation. In order to assess the improvement of 1000G over HapMap imputation in identifying associated loci, we compared the results of GWA studies of circulating fibrinogen based on the two reference panels. Using both HapMap and 1000G imputation we performed a meta-analysis of 22 studies comprising the same 91,953 individuals. We identified six additional signals using 1000G imputation, while 29 loci were associated using both HapMap and 1000G imputation. One locus identified using HapMap imputation was not significant using 1000G imputation. The genome-wide significance threshold of 5×10-8 is based on the number of independent statistical tests using HapMap imputation, and 1000G imputation may lead to further independent tests that should be corrected for. When using a stricter Bonferroni correction for the 1000G GWA study (P-value < 2.5×10-8), the number of loci significant only using HapMap imputation increased to 4 while the number of loci significant only using 1000G decreased to 5. In conclusion, 1000G imputation enabled the identification of 20% more loci than HapMap imputation, although the advantage of 1000G imputation became less clear when a stricter Bonferroni correction was used. More generally, our results provide insights that are applicable to the implementation of other dense reference panels that are under development.

%B PLoS One %V 12 %P e0167742 %8 2017 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0167742 %0 Journal Article %J Aging (Albany NY) %D 2017 %T The complex genetics of gait speed: genome-wide meta-analysis approach. %A Ben-Avraham, Dan %A Karasik, David %A Verghese, Joe %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Eicher, John D %A Vered, Rotem %A Deelen, Joris %A Arnold, Alice M %A Buchman, Aron S %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Faul, Jessica D %A Nethander, Maria %A Fornage, Myriam %A Adams, Hieab H %A Matteini, Amy M %A Callisaya, Michele L %A Smith, Albert V %A Yu, Lei %A De Jager, Philip L %A Evans, Denis A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hofman, Albert %A Pattie, Alison %A Corley, Janie %A Launer, Lenore J %A Knopman, Davis S %A Parimi, Neeta %A Turner, Stephen T %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Beekman, Marian %A Gutman, Danielle %A Sharvit, Lital %A Mooijaart, Simon P %A Liewald, David C %A Houwing-Duistermaat, Jeanine J %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Moed, Matthijs %A Verlinden, Vincent J %A Mellström, Dan %A van der Geest, Jos N %A Karlsson, Magnus %A Hernandez, Dena %A McWhirter, Rebekah %A Liu, Yongmei %A Thomson, Russell %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Weir, David R %A Zhao, Wei %A Starr, John M %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Bennett, David A %A Cummings, Steven R %A Deary, Ian J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Srikanth, Velandai K %A Windham, Beverly G %A Newman, Ann B %A Walston, Jeremy D %A Davies, Gail %A Evans, Daniel S %A Slagboom, Eline P %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Atzmon, Gil %X

Emerging evidence suggests that the basis for variation in late-life mobility is attributable, in part, to genetic factors, which may become increasingly important with age. Our objective was to systematically assess the contribution of genetic variation to gait speed in older individuals. We conducted a meta-analysis of gait speed GWASs in 31,478 older adults from 17 cohorts of the CHARGE consortium, and validated our results in 2,588 older adults from 4 independent studies. We followed our initial discoveries with network and eQTL analysis of candidate signals in tissues. The meta-analysis resulted in a list of 536 suggestive genome wide significant SNPs in or near 69 genes. Further interrogation with Pathway Analysis placed gait speed as a polygenic complex trait in five major networks. Subsequent eQTL analysis revealed several SNPs significantly associated with the expression of PRSS16, WDSUB1 and PTPRT, which in addition to the meta-analysis and pathway suggested that genetic effects on gait speed may occur through synaptic function and neuronal development pathways. No genome-wide significant signals for gait speed were identified from this moderately large sample of older adults, suggesting that more refined physical function phenotypes will be needed to identify the genetic basis of gait speed in aging.

%B Aging (Albany NY) %V 9 %P 209-246 %8 2017 Jan 10 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.18632/aging.101151 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2017 %T DNA Methylation Analysis Identifies Loci for Blood Pressure Regulation. %A Richard, Melissa A %A Huan, Tianxiao %A Ligthart, Symen %A Gondalia, Rahul %A Jhun, Min A %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Marioni, Riccardo %A Shen, Jincheng %A Tsai, Pei-Chien %A Montasser, May E %A Jia, Yucheng %A Syme, Catriona %A Salfati, Elias L %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Guan, Weihua %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Bressler, Jan %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Liu, Chunyu %A Mendelson, Michael M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Meurs, Joyce B %A Franco, Oscar H %A Zhang, Guosheng %A Li, Yun %A Stewart, James D %A Bis, Joshua C %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Zhao, Wei %A Turner, Stephen T %A Absher, Devin %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Starr, John M %A McRae, Allan F %A Hou, Lifang %A Just, Allan C %A Schwartz, Joel D %A Vokonas, Pantel S %A Menni, Cristina %A Spector, Tim D %A Shuldiner, Alan %A Damcott, Coleen M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Palmas, Walter %A Liu, Yongmei %A Paus, Tomáš %A Horvath, Steve %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Pausova, Zdenka %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Arnett, Donna K %A Deary, Ian J %A Baccarelli, Andrea A %A Bell, Jordana T %A Whitsel, Eric %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Levy, Daniel %A Fornage, Myriam %K Aged %K Blood Pressure %K CpG Islands %K Cross-Sectional Studies %K DNA Methylation %K Epigenesis, Genetic %K Genetic Variation %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Mendelian Randomization Analysis %K Middle Aged %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Tetraspanins %X

Genome-wide association studies have identified hundreds of genetic variants associated with blood pressure (BP), but sequence variation accounts for a small fraction of the phenotypic variance. Epigenetic changes may alter the expression of genes involved in BP regulation and explain part of the missing heritability. We therefore conducted a two-stage meta-analysis of the cross-sectional associations of systolic and diastolic BP with blood-derived genome-wide DNA methylation measured on the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip in 17,010 individuals of European, African American, and Hispanic ancestry. Of 31 discovery-stage cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides, 13 replicated after Bonferroni correction (discovery: N = 9,828, p < 1.0 × 10-7; replication: N = 7,182, p < 1.6 × 10-3). The replicated methylation sites are heritable (h2 > 30%) and independent of known BP genetic variants, explaining an additional 1.4% and 2.0% of the interindividual variation in systolic and diastolic BP, respectively. Bidirectional Mendelian randomization among up to 4,513 individuals of European ancestry from 4 cohorts suggested that methylation at cg08035323 (TAF1B-YWHAQ) influences BP, while BP influences methylation at cg00533891 (ZMIZ1), cg00574958 (CPT1A), and cg02711608 (SLC1A5). Gene expression analyses further identified six genes (TSPAN2, SLC7A11, UNC93B1, CPT1A, PTMS, and LPCAT3) with evidence of triangular associations between methylation, gene expression, and BP. Additional integrative Mendelian randomization analyses of gene expression and DNA methylation suggested that the expression of TSPAN2 is a putative mediator of association between DNA methylation at cg23999170 and BP. These findings suggest that heritable DNA methylation plays a role in regulating BP independently of previously known genetic variants.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 101 %P 888-902 %8 2017 Dec 07 %G eng %N 6 %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.09.028 %0 Journal Article %J Sci Rep %D 2017 %T Genetic Interactions with Age, Sex, Body Mass Index, and Hypertension in Relation to Atrial Fibrillation: The AFGen Consortium. %A Weng, Lu-Chen %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Thériault, Sébastien %A Weeke, Peter E %A Barnard, John %A Bis, Joshua C %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Martinsson, Andreas %A Lin, Henry J %A Rienstra, Michiel %A Trompet, Stella %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Dörr, Marcus %A Klarin, Derek %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Launer, Lenore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Paré, Guillaume %A Teixeira, Pedro L %A Denny, Joshua C %A Shoemaker, M Benjamin %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Taylor, Kent D %A Kähönen, Mika %A Nikus, Kjell %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Melander, Olle %A Engström, Gunnar %A Yao, Jie %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Christophersen, Ingrid E %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Geelhoed, Bastiaan %A Verweij, Niek %A Macfarlane, Peter %A Ford, Ian %A Heeringa, Jan %A Franco, Oscar H %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völker, Uwe %A Teumer, Alexander %A Rose, Lynda M %A Kääb, Stefan %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Arking, Dan E %A Conen, David %A Roden, Dan M %A Chung, Mina K %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A März, Winfried %A Smith, J Gustav %A Rotter, Jerome I %A van der Harst, Pim %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Felix, Stephan B %A Albert, Christine M %A Lubitz, Steven A %X

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 × 10-5). The interaction p-value exceeded genome-wide significance in combined discovery and replication analyses (interaction p-value = 1.7 × 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.

%B Sci Rep %V 7 %P 11303 %8 2017 Sep 12 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41598-017-09396-7 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2017 %T Genetic loci associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap with loci for lung function and pulmonary fibrosis. %A Hobbs, Brian D %A de Jong, Kim %A Lamontagne, Maxime %A Bossé, Yohan %A Shrine, Nick %A Artigas, Maria Soler %A Wain, Louise V %A Hall, Ian P %A Jackson, Victoria E %A Wyss, Annah B %A London, Stephanie J %A North, Kari E %A Franceschini, Nora %A Strachan, David P %A Beaty, Terri H %A Hokanson, John E %A Crapo, James D %A Castaldi, Peter J %A Chase, Robert P %A Bartz, Traci M %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Gharib, Sina A %A Zanen, Pieter %A Lammers, Jan W %A Oudkerk, Matthijs %A Groen, H J %A Locantore, Nicholas %A Tal-Singer, Ruth %A Rennard, Stephen I %A Vestbo, Jørgen %A Timens, Wim %A Paré, Peter D %A Latourelle, Jeanne C %A Dupuis, Josée %A O'Connor, George T %A Wilk, Jemma B %A Kim, Woo Jin %A Lee, Mi Kyeong %A Oh, Yeon-Mok %A Vonk, Judith M %A de Koning, Harry J %A Leng, Shuguang %A Belinsky, Steven A %A Tesfaigzi, Yohannes %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Wang, Xin-Qun %A Rich, Stephen S %A Barr, R Graham %A Sparrow, David %A Litonjua, Augusto A %A Bakke, Per %A Gulsvik, Amund %A Lahousse, Lies %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Ampleford, Elizabeth J %A Bleecker, Eugene R %A Woodruff, Prescott G %A Meyers, Deborah A %A Qiao, Dandi %A Lomas, David A %A Yim, Jae-Joon %A Kim, Deog Kyeom %A Hawrylkiewicz, Iwona %A Sliwinski, Pawel %A Hardin, Megan %A Fingerlin, Tasha E %A Schwartz, David A %A Postma, Dirkje S %A MacNee, William %A Tobin, Martin D %A Silverman, Edwin K %A Boezen, H Marike %A Cho, Michael H %X

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of mortality worldwide. We performed a genetic association study in 15,256 cases and 47,936 controls, with replication of select top results (P < 5 × 10(-6)) in 9,498 cases and 9,748 controls. In the combined meta-analysis, we identified 22 loci associated at genome-wide significance, including 13 new associations with COPD. Nine of these 13 loci have been associated with lung function in general population samples, while 4 (EEFSEC, DSP, MTCL1, and SFTPD) are new. We noted two loci shared with pulmonary fibrosis (FAM13A and DSP) but that had opposite risk alleles for COPD. None of our loci overlapped with genome-wide associations for asthma, although one locus has been implicated in joint susceptibility to asthma and obesity. We also identified genetic correlation between COPD and asthma. Our findings highlight new loci associated with COPD, demonstrate the importance of specific loci associated with lung function to COPD, and identify potential regions of genetic overlap between COPD and other respiratory diseases.

%B Nat Genet %V 49 %P 426-432 %8 2017 Mar %G eng %N 3 %R 10.1038/ng.3752 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2017 %T Genetic loci associated with heart rate variability and their effects on cardiac disease risk. %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Munoz, M Loretto %A Tragante, Vinicius %A Amare, Azmeraw T %A Jansen, Rick %A Vaez, Ahmad %A von der Heyde, Benedikt %A Avery, Christy L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Dierckx, Bram %A van Dongen, Jenny %A Gogarten, Stephanie M %A Goyette, Philippe %A Hernesniemi, Jussi %A Huikari, Ville %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Jaju, Deepali %A Kerr, Kathleen F %A Kluttig, Alexander %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Kumar, Jitender %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Maihofer, Adam X %A Minassian, Arpi %A van der Most, Peter J %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nivard, Michel %A Salvi, Erika %A Stewart, James D %A Thayer, Julian F %A Verweij, Niek %A Wong, Andrew %A Zabaneh, Delilah %A Zafarmand, Mohammad H %A Abdellaoui, Abdel %A Albarwani, Sulayma %A Albert, Christine %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Ashar, Foram %A Auvinen, Juha %A Axelsson, Tomas %A Baker, Dewleen G %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Barcella, Matteo %A Bayoumi, Riad %A Bieringa, Rob J %A Boomsma, Dorret %A Boucher, Gabrielle %A Britton, Annie R %A Christophersen, Ingrid %A Dietrich, Andrea %A Ehret, George B %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Eskola, Markku %A Felix, Janine F %A Floras, John S %A Franco, Oscar H %A Friberg, Peter %A Gademan, Maaike G J %A Geyer, Mark A %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Hemerich, Daiane %A Hofman, Albert %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Huikuri, Heikki %A Hutri-Kähönen, Nina %A Jouven, Xavier %A Junttila, Juhani %A Juonala, Markus %A Kiviniemi, Antti M %A Kors, Jan A %A Kumari, Meena %A Kuznetsova, Tatiana %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Lefrandt, Joop D %A Li, Yong %A Li, Yun %A Liao, Duanping %A Limacher, Marian C %A Lin, Henry J %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Mahajan, Anubha %A McKnight, Barbara %A Zu Schwabedissen, Henriette Meyer %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Mononen, Nina %A Morris, Andrew P %A Nalls, Mike A %A Navis, Gerjan %A Neijts, Melanie %A Nikus, Kjell %A North, Kari E %A O'Connor, Daniel T %A Ormel, Johan %A Perz, Siegfried %A Peters, Annette %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Risbrough, Victoria B %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Siscovick, David %A Smit, Johannes H %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Staessen, Jan A %A Stein, Phyllis K %A Stilp, Adrienne M %A Stolarz-Skrzypek, Katarzyna %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Sundström, Johan %A Swenne, Cees A %A Syvänen, Ann-Christine %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Thornton, Timothy A %A Tinker, Lesley E %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Setten, Jessica %A Voss, Andreas %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wilhelmsen, Kirk C %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wong, Quenna %A Zhang, Zhu-Ming %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Cusi, Daniele %A Evans, Michele K %A Greiser, Halina K %A van der Harst, Pim %A Hassan, Mohammad %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Kääb, Stefan %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Kuh, Diana %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lind, Lars %A Nievergelt, Caroline M %A O'Donnell, Chris J %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Penninx, Brenda %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Riese, Harriëtte %A van Roon, Arie M %A Rioux, John D %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sofer, Tamar %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Vrijkotte, Tanja G M %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Brundel, Bianca J J M %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Whitsel, Eric A %A den Hoed, Marcel %A Snieder, Harold %A de Geus, Eco J C %X

Reduced cardiac vagal control reflected in low heart rate variability (HRV) is associated with greater risks for cardiac morbidity and mortality. In two-stage meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies for three HRV traits in up to 53,174 individuals of European ancestry, we detect 17 genome-wide significant SNPs in eight loci. HRV SNPs tag non-synonymous SNPs (in NDUFA11 and KIAA1755), expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) (influencing GNG11, RGS6 and NEO1), or are located in genes preferentially expressed in the sinoatrial node (GNG11, RGS6 and HCN4). Genetic risk scores account for 0.9 to 2.6% of the HRV variance. Significant genetic correlation is found for HRV with heart rate (-0.74 %B Nat Commun %V 8 %P 15805 %8 2017 Jun 14 %G eng %R 10.1038/ncomms15805 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2017 %T Genome-wide association meta-analysis of fish and EPA+DHA consumption in 17 US and European cohorts. %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Dashti, Hassan S %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Nettleton, Jennifer A %A Männistö, Satu %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Reedik, Mägi %A Lahti, Jari %A Houston, Denise K %A Cornelis, Marilyn C %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Dimitriou, Maria %A Kanoni, Stavroula %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Steffen, Lyn M %A de Oliveira Otto, Marcia C %A Qi, Lu %A Psaty, Bruce %A Djoussé, Luc %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Harald, Kennet %A Perola, Markus %A Rissanen, Harri %A Jula, Antti %A Krista, Fischer %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Ngwa, Julius S %A Xue, Luting %A Jacques, Paul F %A Perälä, Mia-Maria %A Palotie, Aarno %A Liu, Yongmei %A Nalls, Nike A %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Hernandez, Dena %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C %A Hofman, Albert %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rallidis, Loukianos %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rose, Lynda M %A Buring, Julie E %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Kähönen, Mika %A Viikari, Jorma %A Lemaitre, Rozenn %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Knekt, Paul %A Metspalu, Andres %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Siscovick, David %A Franco, Oscar H %A Deloukas, Panos %A Dedoussis, George %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Raitakari, Olli %A Tanaka, Toshiko %K Adult %K Aged %K Cohort Studies %K Docosahexaenoic Acids %K Eicosapentaenoic Acid %K Europe %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Seafood %K United States %X

BACKGROUND: Regular fish and omega-3 consumption may have several health benefits and are recommended by major dietary guidelines. Yet, their intakes remain remarkably variable both within and across populations, which could partly owe to genetic influences.

OBJECTIVE: To identify common genetic variants that influence fish and dietary eicosapentaenoic acid plus docosahexaenoic acid (EPA+DHA) consumption.

DESIGN: We conducted genome-wide association (GWA) meta-analysis of fish (n = 86,467) and EPA+DHA (n = 62,265) consumption in 17 cohorts of European descent from the CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology) Consortium Nutrition Working Group. Results from cohort-specific GWA analyses (additive model) for fish and EPA+DHA consumption were adjusted for age, sex, energy intake, and population stratification, and meta-analyzed separately using fixed-effect meta-analysis with inverse variance weights (METAL software). Additionally, heritability was estimated in 2 cohorts.

RESULTS: Heritability estimates for fish and EPA+DHA consumption ranged from 0.13-0.24 and 0.12-0.22, respectively. A significant GWA for fish intake was observed for rs9502823 on chromosome 6: each copy of the minor allele (FreqA = 0.015) was associated with 0.029 servings/day (~1 serving/month) lower fish consumption (P = 1.96x10-8). No significant association was observed for EPA+DHA, although rs7206790 in the obesity-associated FTO gene was among top hits (P = 8.18x10-7). Post-hoc calculations demonstrated 95% statistical power to detect a genetic variant associated with effect size of 0.05% for fish and 0.08% for EPA+DHA.

CONCLUSIONS: These novel findings suggest that non-genetic personal and environmental factors are principal determinants of the remarkable variation in fish consumption, representing modifiable targets for increasing intakes among all individuals. Genes underlying the signal at rs72838923 and mechanisms for the association warrant further investigation.

%B PLoS One %V 12 %P e0186456 %8 2017 %G eng %N 12 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0186456 %0 Journal Article %J J Med Genet %D 2017 %T A genome-wide interaction analysis of tricyclic/tetracyclic antidepressants and RR and QT intervals: a pharmacogenomics study from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium. %A Noordam, Raymond %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Avery, Christy L %A Stewart, James D %A Gogarten, Stephanie M %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Trompet, Stella %A Warren, Helen R %A Sun, Fangui %A Evans, Daniel S %A Li, Xiaohui %A Li, Jin %A Smith, Albert V %A Bis, Joshua C %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Busch, Evan L %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Chen, Yii-der I %A Cummings, Steven R %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Duan, Qing %A Franco, Oscar H %A Méndez-Giráldez, Rául %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heckbert, Susan R %A van Heemst, Diana %A Hofman, Albert %A Floyd, James S %A Kors, Jan A %A Launer, Lenore J %A Li, Yun %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Lange, Leslie A %A Lin, Henry J %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Napier, Melanie D %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Poulter, Neil %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Roach, Jeffrey %A Rodriguez, Carlos J %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Sattar, Naveed %A Sever, Peter %A Seyerle, Amanda A %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stott, David J %A Stürmer, Til %A Taylor, Kent D %A Thornton, Timothy A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wilhelmsen, Kirk C %A Wilson, James G %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Liu, Yongmei %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Whitsel, Eric A %X

BACKGROUND: Increased heart rate and a prolonged QT interval are important risk factors for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and can be influenced by the use of various medications, including tricyclic/tetracyclic antidepressants (TCAs). We aim to identify genetic loci that modify the association between TCA use and RR and QT intervals.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted race/ethnic-specific genome-wide interaction analyses (with HapMap phase II imputed reference panel imputation) of TCAs and resting RR and QT intervals in cohorts of European (n=45 706; n=1417 TCA users), African (n=10 235; n=296 TCA users) and Hispanic/Latino (n=13 808; n=147 TCA users) ancestry, adjusted for clinical covariates. Among the populations of European ancestry, two genome-wide significant loci were identified for RR interval: rs6737205 in BRE (β=56.3, pinteraction=3.9e(-9)) and rs9830388 in UBE2E2 (β=25.2, pinteraction=1.7e(-8)). In Hispanic/Latino cohorts, rs2291477 in TGFBR3 significantly modified the association between TCAs and QT intervals (β=9.3, pinteraction=2.55e(-8)). In the meta-analyses of the other ethnicities, these loci either were excluded from the meta-analyses (as part of quality control), or their effects did not reach the level of nominal statistical significance (pinteraction>0.05). No new variants were identified in these ethnicities. No additional loci were identified after inverse-variance-weighted meta-analysis of the three ancestries.

CONCLUSIONS: Among Europeans, TCA interactions with variants in BRE and UBE2E2 were identified in relation to RR intervals. Among Hispanic/Latinos, variants in TGFBR3 modified the relation between TCAs and QT intervals. Future studies are required to confirm our results.

%B J Med Genet %V 54 %P 313-323 %8 2017 May %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104112 %0 Journal Article %J Mol Nutr Food Res %D 2017 %T Genome-Wide Interactions with Dairy Intake for Body Mass Index in Adults of European Descent. %A Smith, Caren E %A Follis, Jack L %A Dashti, Hassan S %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Fretts, Amanda M %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Richardson, Kris %A Nalls, Mike A %A Schulz, Christina-Alexandra %A Liu, Yongmei %A Frazier-Wood, Alexis C %A van Eekelen, Esther %A Wang, Carol %A de Vries, Paul S %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Rohde, Rebecca %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Hansen, Torben %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Lai, Chao-Qiang %A Houston, Denise K %A Ferruci, Luigi %A Ericson, Ulrika %A Wang, Zhe %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Oddy, Wendy H %A de Jonge, Ester A L %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Justice, Anne E %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Sørensen, Thorkild I A %A Province, Michael A %A Parnell, Laurence D %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Pennell, Craig E %A Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C %A Kähönen, Mika %A Young, Kristin L %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Raitakari, Olli T %A North, Kari E %A Overvad, Kim %A Arnett, Donna K %A Hofman, Albert %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Tjønneland, Anne %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Franco, Oscar H %A German, J Bruce %A Siscovick, David S %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Ordovas, Jose M %X

SCOPE: Body weight responds variably to the intake of dairy foods. Genetic variation may contribute to inter-individual variability in associations between body weight and dairy consumption.

METHODS AND RESULTS: A genome-wide interaction study to discover genetic variants that account for variation in BMI in the context of low-fat, high-fat and total dairy intake in cross-sectional analysis was conducted. Data from nine discovery studies (up to 25 513 European descent individuals) were meta-analyzed. Twenty-six genetic variants reached the selected significance threshold (p-interaction <10-7) , and six independent variants (LINC01512-rs7751666, PALM2/AKAP2-rs914359, ACTA2-rs1388, PPP1R12A-rs7961195, LINC00333-rs9635058, AC098847.1-rs1791355) were evaluated meta-analytically for replication of interaction in up to 17 675 individuals. Variant rs9635058 (128 kb 3' of LINC00333) was replicated (p-interaction = 0.004). In the discovery cohorts, rs9635058 interacted with dairy (p-interaction = 7.36 × 10-8) such that each serving of low-fat dairy was associated with 0.225 kg m-2 lower BMI per each additional copy of the effect allele (A). A second genetic variant (ACTA2-rs1388) approached interaction replication significance for low-fat dairy exposure.

CONCLUSION: Body weight responses to dairy intake may be modified by genotype, in that greater dairy intake may protect a genetic subgroup from higher body weight.

%B Mol Nutr Food Res %8 2017 Sep 21 %G eng %R 10.1002/mnfr.201700347 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2017 %T Genome-wide meta-analysis associates HLA-DQA1/DRB1 and LPA and lifestyle factors with human longevity. %A Joshi, Peter K %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Kentistou, Katherine A %A Fischer, Krista %A Hofer, Edith %A Schraut, Katharina E %A Clark, David W %A Nutile, Teresa %A Barnes, Catriona L K %A Timmers, Paul R H J %A Shen, Xia %A Gandin, Ilaria %A McDaid, Aaron F %A Hansen, Thomas Folkmann %A Gordon, Scott D %A Giulianini, Franco %A Boutin, Thibaud S %A Abdellaoui, Abdel %A Zhao, Wei %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Bartz, Traci M %A Trompet, Stella %A Lange, Leslie A %A Raffield, Laura %A van der Spek, Ashley %A Galesloot, Tessel E %A Proitsi, Petroula %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Payton, Antony %A Murgia, Federico %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Biino, Ginevra %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Amin, Najaf %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Børglum, Anders D %A Campbell, Archie %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Demuth, Ilja %A Faul, Jessica D %A Ford, Ian %A Gialluisi, Alessandro %A Gögele, Martin %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Hingorani, Aroon %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Hougaard, David M %A Hurme, Mikko A %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jylhä, Marja %A Kuh, Diana %A Ligthart, Lannie %A Lill, Christina M %A Lindenberger, Ulman %A Lumley, Thomas %A Mägi, Reedik %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Medland, Sarah E %A Milani, Lili %A Nagy, Reka %A Ollier, William E R %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Saba, Yasaman %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schmidt, Helena %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Smith, Blair H %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Steinhagen-Thiessen, Elisabeth %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Verbeek, André L %A Vermeulen, Sita H %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wang, Yunpeng %A Werge, Thomas %A Whitfield, John B %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Evans, Michele K %A Pirastu, Mario %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Bertram, Lars %A Pendleton, Neil %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Ciullo, Marina %A Becker, Diane M %A Wong, Andrew %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wilson, James G %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kiemeney, Lambertus %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franceschini, Nora %A North, Kari E %A Weir, David R %A Metspalu, Andres %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Hayward, Caroline %A Chasman, Daniel %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Sattar, Naveed %A Campbell, Harry %A Esko, Tõnu %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Wilson, James F %X

Genomic analysis of longevity offers the potential to illuminate the biology of human aging. Here, using genome-wide association meta-analysis of 606,059 parents' survival, we discover two regions associated with longevity (HLA-DQA1/DRB1 and LPA). We also validate previous suggestions that APOE, CHRNA3/5, CDKN2A/B, SH2B3 and FOXO3A influence longevity. Next we show that giving up smoking, educational attainment, openness to new experience and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels are most positively genetically correlated with lifespan while susceptibility to coronary artery disease (CAD), cigarettes smoked per day, lung cancer, insulin resistance and body fat are most negatively correlated. We suggest that the effect of education on lifespan is principally mediated through smoking while the effect of obesity appears to act via CAD. Using instrumental variables, we suggest that an increase of one body mass index unit reduces lifespan by 7 months while 1 year of education adds 11 months to expected lifespan.Variability in human longevity is genetically influenced. Using genetic data of parental lifespan, the authors identify associations at HLA-DQA/DRB1 and LPA and find that genetic variants that increase educational attainment have a positive effect on lifespan whereas increasing BMI negatively affects lifespan.

%B Nat Commun %V 8 %P 910 %8 2017 Oct 13 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-017-00934-5 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2017 %T Genome-wide Trans-ethnic Meta-analysis Identifies Seven Genetic Loci Influencing Erythrocyte Traits and a Role for RBPMS in Erythropoiesis. %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Qayyum, Rehan %A Smith, Albert V %A Zhou, Yi %A Trompet, Stella %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Keller, Margaux F %A Chang, Li-Ching %A Schmidt, Helena %A Yang, Min-Lee %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Hayes, James %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Mueller, Christian %A Lange, Leslie %A Floyd, James S %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Hofman, Albert %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Desch, Karl C %A Saba, Yasaman %A Ozel, Ayse B %A Snively, Beverly M %A Wu, Jer-Yuarn %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Fornage, Myriam %A Klein, Robert J %A Fox, Caroline S %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Kamatani, Naoyuki %A Wild, Philipp S %A Stott, David J %A Ford, Ian %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Yang, Jaden %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Lambert, Amy J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Hofer, Edith %A Ginsburg, David %A Hu, Bella %A Keating, Brendan %A Schick, Ursula M %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Li, Jun Z %A Chen, Zhao %A Zeller, Tanja %A Guralnik, Jack M %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Peters, Luanne L %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Becker, Diane M %A Li, Jin %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Levy, Daniel %A Grossmann, Vera %A Patel, Kushang V %A Chen, Chien-Hsiun %A Ridker, Paul M %A Tang, Hua %A Launer, Lenore J %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Evans, Michelle K %A Choudhuri, Avik %A Trompouki, Eirini %A Abraham, Brian J %A Yang, Song %A Takahashi, Atsushi %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Harris, Tamara B %A Jee, Sun Ha %A Coresh, Josef %A Tsai, Fuu-Jen %A Longo, Dan L %A Chen, Yuan-Tsong %A Felix, Janine F %A Yang, Qiong %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Becker, Lewis C %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Wilson, James G %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Nalls, Michael A %A Morris, Andrew P %A Okada, Yukinori %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Zon, Leonard I %A Ganesh, Santhi K %X

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified loci for erythrocyte traits in primarily European ancestry populations. We conducted GWAS meta-analyses of six erythrocyte traits in 71,638 individuals from European, East Asian, and African ancestries using a Bayesian approach to account for heterogeneity in allelic effects and variation in the structure of linkage disequilibrium between ethnicities. We identified seven loci for erythrocyte traits including a locus (RBPMS/GTF2E2) associated with mean corpuscular hemoglobin and mean corpuscular volume. Statistical fine-mapping at this locus pointed to RBPMS at this locus and excluded nearby GTF2E2. Using zebrafish morpholino to evaluate loss of function, we observed a strong in vivo erythropoietic effect for RBPMS but not for GTF2E2, supporting the statistical fine-mapping at this locus and demonstrating that RBPMS is a regulator of erythropoiesis. Our findings show the utility of trans-ethnic GWASs for discovery and characterization of genetic loci influencing hematologic traits.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 100 %P 51-63 %8 2017 Jan 05 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.11.016 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2017 %T Large meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies identifies five loci for lean body mass. %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Hsu, Yi-Hsiang %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Chou, Wen-Chi %A Stolk, Lisette %A Livshits, Gregory %A Broer, Linda %A Johnson, Toby %A Koller, Daniel L %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Luan, Jian'an %A Malkin, Ida %A Ried, Janina S %A Smith, Albert V %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Hua Zhao, Jing %A Zhang, Weihua %A Aghdassi, Ali %A Åkesson, Kristina %A Amin, Najaf %A Baier, Leslie J %A Barroso, Inês %A Bennett, David A %A Bertram, Lars %A Biffar, Rainer %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boehnke, Michael %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Buchman, Aron S %A Byberg, Liisa %A Campbell, Harry %A Campos Obanda, Natalia %A Cauley, Jane A %A Cawthon, Peggy M %A Cederberg, Henna %A Chen, Zhao %A Cho, Nam H %A Jin Choi, Hyung %A Claussnitzer, Melina %A Collins, Francis %A Cummings, Steven R %A De Jager, Philip L %A Demuth, Ilja %A Dhonukshe-Rutten, Rosalie A M %A Diatchenko, Luda %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Enneman, Anke W %A Erdos, Mike %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Eriksson, Joel %A Estrada, Karol %A Evans, Daniel S %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Fu, Mao %A Garcia, Melissa %A Gieger, Christian %A Girke, Thomas %A Glazer, Nicole L %A Grallert, Harald %A Grewal, Jagvir %A Han, Bok-Ghee %A Hanson, Robert L %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hofman, Albert %A Hoffman, Eric P %A Homuth, Georg %A Hsueh, Wen-Chi %A Hubal, Monica J %A Hubbard, Alan %A Huffman, Kim M %A Husted, Lise B %A Illig, Thomas %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Ittermann, Till %A Jansson, John-Olov %A Jordan, Joanne M %A Jula, Antti %A Karlsson, Magnus %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Klopp, Norman %A Kloth, Jacqueline S L %A Koistinen, Heikki A %A Kraus, William E %A Kritchevsky, Stephen %A Kuulasmaa, Teemu %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Lahti, Jari %A Lang, Thomas %A Langdahl, Bente L %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lee, Jong-Young %A Lerch, Markus M %A Lewis, Joshua R %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia %A Liu, Yongmei %A Liu, Tian %A Liu, Youfang %A Ljunggren, Osten %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Luben, Robert N %A Maixner, William %A McGuigan, Fiona E %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Melhus, Håkan %A Mellström, Dan %A Melov, Simon %A Michaëlsson, Karl %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Morris, Andrew P %A Mosekilde, Leif %A Newman, Anne %A Nielson, Carrie M %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Oostra, Ben A %A Orwoll, Eric S %A Palotie, Aarno %A Parker, Stephen C J %A Peacock, Munro %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Annette %A Polasek, Ozren %A Prince, Richard L %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Ralston, Stuart H %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Robbins, John A %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Satterfield, Suzanne %A Schadt, Eric E %A Schipf, Sabine %A Scott, Laura %A Sehmi, Joban %A Shen, Jian %A Soo Shin, Chan %A Sigurdsson, Gunnar %A Smith, Shad %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Stančáková, Alena %A Steinhagen-Thiessen, Elisabeth %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Swart, Karin M A %A Tan, Sian-Tsung %A Tarnopolsky, Mark A %A Thompson, Patricia %A Thomson, Cynthia A %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tikkanen, Emmi %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A van Schoor, Natasja M %A Verma, Arjun %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Völzke, Henry %A Wactawski-Wende, Jean %A Walker, Mark %A Weedon, Michael N %A Welch, Ryan %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Williams, Frances M K %A Wilson, James F %A Wright, Nicole C %A Xie, Weijia %A Yu, Lei %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Chambers, John C %A Döring, Angela %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Econs, Michael J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Ossowski, Vicky %A Waterworth, Dawn %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Karasik, David %A Harris, Tamara B %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Kiel, Douglas P %X

Lean body mass, consisting mostly of skeletal muscle, is important for healthy aging. We performed a genome-wide association study for whole body (20 cohorts of European ancestry with n = 38,292) and appendicular (arms and legs) lean body mass (n = 28,330) measured using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry or bioelectrical impedance analysis, adjusted for sex, age, height, and fat mass. Twenty-one single-nucleotide polymorphisms were significantly associated with lean body mass either genome wide (p < 5 × 10-8) or suggestively genome wide (p < 2.3 × 10-6). Replication in 63,475 (47,227 of European ancestry) individuals from 33 cohorts for whole body lean body mass and in 45,090 (42,360 of European ancestry) subjects from 25 cohorts for appendicular lean body mass was successful for five single-nucleotide polymorphisms in/near HSD17B11, VCAN, ADAMTSL3, IRS1, and FTO for total lean body mass and for three single-nucleotide polymorphisms in/near VCAN, ADAMTSL3, and IRS1 for appendicular lean body mass. Our findings provide new insight into the genetics of lean body mass.Lean body mass is a highly heritable trait and is associated with various health conditions. Here, Kiel and colleagues perform a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for whole body lean body mass and find five novel genetic loci to be significantly associated.

%B Nat Commun %V 8 %P 80 %8 2017 Jul 19 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-017-00031-7 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2017 %T Large-scale analyses of common and rare variants identify 12 new loci associated with atrial fibrillation. %A Christophersen, Ingrid E %A Rienstra, Michiel %A Roselli, Carolina %A Yin, Xiaoyan %A Geelhoed, Bastiaan %A Barnard, John %A Lin, Honghuang %A Arking, Dan E %A Smith, Albert V %A Albert, Christine M %A Chaffin, Mark %A Tucker, Nathan R %A Li, Molong %A Klarin, Derek %A Bihlmeyer, Nathan A %A Low, Siew-Kee %A Weeke, Peter E %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Smith, J Gustav %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Niemeijer, Maartje N %A Dörr, Marcus %A Trompet, Stella %A Huffman, Jennifer %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Malik, Rainer %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Perez, Marco %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Aeschbacher, Stefanie %A Thériault, Sébastien %A Yao, Jie %A Radmanesh, Farid %A Weiss, Stefan %A Teumer, Alexander %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Weng, Lu-Chen %A Clauss, Sebastian %A Deo, Rajat %A Rader, Daniel J %A Shah, Svati H %A Sun, Albert %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Debette, Stephanie %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Yang, Qiong %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Paré, Guillaume %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Hagemeijer, Yanick P %A Verweij, Niek %A Siland, Joylene E %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Bis, Joshua C %A Perz, Siegfried %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Magnani, Jared W %A Harris, Tamara B %A Launer, Lenore J %A Shoemaker, M Benjamin %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Haessler, Jeffrey %A Bartz, Traci M %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Lichtner, Peter %A Arendt, Marina %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kähönen, Mika %A Risch, Lorenz %A Mansur, Alfredo J %A Peters, Annette %A Smith, Blair H %A Lind, Lars %A Scott, Stuart A %A Lu, Yingchang %A Bottinger, Erwin B %A Hernesniemi, Jussi %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Wong, Jorge A %A Huang, Jie %A Eskola, Markku %A Morris, Andrew P %A Ford, Ian %A Reiner, Alex P %A Delgado, Graciela %A Chen, Lin Y %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Sandhu, Roopinder K %A Li, Man %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Eisele, Lewin %A Lannfelt, Lars %A Rost, Natalia %A Anderson, Christopher D %A Taylor, Kent D %A Campbell, Archie %A Magnusson, Patrik K %A Porteous, David %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Vlachopoulou, Efthymia %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Nikus, Kjell %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Hamsten, Anders %A Heeringa, Jan %A Denny, Joshua C %A Kriebel, Jennifer %A Darbar, Dawood %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Shaffer, Christian %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie %A Almgren, Peter %A Huang, Paul L %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Franco, Oscar H %A Völker, Uwe %A Jöckel, Karl-Heinz %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Lin, Henry J %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Dichgans, Martin %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Melander, Olle %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Laurikka, Jari %A Conen, David %A Rosand, Jonathan %A van der Harst, Pim %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Pereira, Alexandre %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Hayward, Caroline %A Rotter, Jerome I %A März, Winfried %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Chung, Mina K %A Felix, Stephan B %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Roden, Dan M %A Kääb, Stefan %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Ellinor, Patrick T %X

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.

%B Nat Genet %V 49 %P 946-952 %8 2017 Jun %G eng %N 6 %R 10.1038/ng.3843 %0 Journal Article %J J Clin Invest %D 2017 %T Large-scale genome-wide analysis identifies genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function. %A Wild, Philipp S %A Felix, Janine F %A Schillert, Arne %A Teumer, Alexander %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Leening, Maarten J G %A Völker, Uwe %A Großmann, Vera %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Shah, Sanjiv J %A Pramana, Setia %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Stanton, Alice V %A Malzahn, Dörthe %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Sundström, Johan %A Minelli, Cosetta %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Tiller, Daniel %A Smith, J Gustav %A Monnereau, Claire %A Di Tullio, Marco R %A Musani, Solomon K %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Pers, Tune H %A Morley, Michael %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Aragam, Jayashri %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bisping, Egbert %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Cheng, Susan %A Deckers, Jaap W %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Edelmann, Frank %A Fornage, Myriam %A Franke, Lude %A Friedrich, Nele %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofer, Edith %A Hofman, Albert %A Huang, Jie %A Hughes, Alun D %A Kähönen, Mika %A Investigators, Knhi %A Kruppa, Jochen %A Lackner, Karl J %A Lannfelt, Lars %A Laskowski, Rafael %A Launer, Lenore J %A Leosdottir, Margrét %A Lin, Honghuang %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Loley, Christina %A MacRae, Calum A %A Mascalzoni, Deborah %A Mayet, Jamil %A Medenwald, Daniel %A Morris, Andrew P %A Müller, Christian %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nappo, Stefania %A Nilsson, Peter M %A Nuding, Sebastian %A Nutile, Teresa %A Peters, Annette %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Pietzner, Diana %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Ruohonen, Saku T %A Sacco, Ralph L %A Samdarshi, Tandaw E %A Schmidt, Helena %A Sharp, Andrew S P %A Shields, Denis C %A Sorice, Rossella %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Surendran, Praveen %A Thom, Simon %A Töglhofer, Anna M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wachter, Rolf %A Völzke, Henry %A Ziegler, Andreas %A Münzel, Thomas %A März, Winfried %A Cappola, Thomas P %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Mitchell, Gary F %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Fox, Ervin R %A Dueker, Nicole D %A Jaddoe, Vincent W V %A Melander, Olle %A Russ, Martin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Ciullo, Marina %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Lind, Lars %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Pieske, Burkert %A Barron, Anthony J %A Zweiker, Robert %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Liu, Kiang %A Arnett, Donna K %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Blankenberg, Stefan %A Larson, Martin G %A Felix, Stephan B %A Franco, Oscar H %A Zeller, Tanja %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Dörr, Marcus %X

BACKGROUND: Understanding the genetic architecture of cardiac structure and function may help to prevent and treat heart disease. This investigation sought to identify common genetic variations associated with inter-individual variability in cardiac structure and function.

METHODS: A GWAS meta-analysis of echocardiographic traits was performed, including 46,533 individuals from 30 studies (EchoGen consortium). The analysis included 16 traits of left ventricular (LV) structure, and systolic and diastolic function.

RESULTS: The discovery analysis included 21 cohorts for structural and systolic function traits (n = 32,212) and 17 cohorts for diastolic function traits (n = 21,852). Replication was performed in 5 cohorts (n = 14,321) and 6 cohorts (n = 16,308), respectively. Besides 5 previously reported loci, the combined meta-analysis identified 10 additional genome-wide significant SNPs: rs12541595 near MTSS1 and rs10774625 in ATXN2 for LV end-diastolic internal dimension; rs806322 near KCNRG, rs4765663 in CACNA1C, rs6702619 near PALMD, rs7127129 in TMEM16A, rs11207426 near FGGY, rs17608766 in GOSR2, and rs17696696 in CFDP1 for aortic root diameter; and rs12440869 in IQCH for Doppler transmitral A-wave peak velocity. Findings were in part validated in other cohorts and in GWAS of related disease traits. The genetic loci showed associations with putative signaling pathways, and with gene expression in whole blood, monocytes, and myocardial tissue.

CONCLUSION: The additional genetic loci identified in this large meta-analysis of cardiac structure and function provide insights into the underlying genetic architecture of cardiac structure and warrant follow-up in future functional studies.

FUNDING: For detailed information per study, see Acknowledgments.

%B J Clin Invest %V 127 %P 1798-1812 %8 2017 May 01 %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1172/JCI84840 %0 Journal Article %J Hypertension %D 2017 %T Novel Blood Pressure Locus and Gene Discovery Using Genome-Wide Association Study and Expression Data Sets From Blood and the Kidney. %A Wain, Louise V %A Vaez, Ahmad %A Jansen, Rick %A Joehanes, Roby %A van der Most, Peter J %A Erzurumluoglu, A Mesut %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Cabrera, Claudia P %A Warren, Helen R %A Rose, Lynda M %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Esko, Tõnu %A Arking, Dan E %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Trompet, Stella %A Shrine, Nick %A Teumer, Alexander %A Ried, Janina S %A Bis, Joshua C %A Smith, Albert V %A Amin, Najaf %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Hofer, Edith %A Joshi, Peter K %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Traglia, Michela %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Goel, Anuj %A Nalls, Mike A %A Sõber, Siim %A Vuckovic, Dragana %A Luan, Jian'an %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Ayers, Kristin L %A Marrugat, Jaume %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Niiranen, Teemu %A Enroth, Stefan %A Jackson, Anne U %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Zhang, Weihua %A Marten, Jonathan %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Harris, Sarah E %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Lu, Yingchang %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Shah, Nabi %A de Borst, Martin H %A Mangino, Massimo %A Prins, Bram P %A Campbell, Archie %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Abecasis, Goncalo %A Abedi, Maryam %A Barbieri, Caterina M %A Barnes, Michael R %A Batini, Chiara %A Beilby, John %A Blake, Tineka %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Braund, Peter S %A Brown, Morris %A Brumat, Marco %A Campbell, Harry %A Chambers, John C %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Collins, Francis %A Connell, John %A Cordell, Heather J %A Damman, Jeffrey J %A Davies, Gail %A de Geus, Eco J %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Deelen, Joris %A Demirkale, Yusuf %A Doney, Alex S F %A Dörr, Marcus %A Farrall, Martin %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Frånberg, Mattias %A Gao, He %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Gieger, Christian %A Giulianini, Franco %A Gow, Alan J %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofman, Albert %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Hui, Jennie %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Johansson, Asa %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Larson, Marty %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Liewald, David C M %A Lin, Li %A Lind, Lars %A Mach, François %A Mamasoula, Chrysovalanto %A Menni, Cristina %A Mifsud, Borbala %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Morgan, Anna %A Morris, Andrew D %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Munson, Peter J %A Nandakumar, Priyanka %A Nguyen, Quang Tri %A Nutile, Teresa %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Oostra, Ben A %A Org, Elin %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Palotie, Aarno %A Paré, Guillaume %A Pattie, Alison %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Poulter, Neil %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Ren, Meixia %A Rice, Kenneth %A Ridker, Paul M %A Riese, Harriëtte %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Saba, Yasaman %A Saint Pierre, Aude %A Sala, Cinzia F %A Sarin, Antti-Pekka %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Scott, Rodney %A Seelen, Marc A %A Shields, Denis C %A Siscovick, David %A Sorice, Rossella %A Stanton, Alice %A Stott, David J %A Sundström, Johan %A Swertz, Morris %A Taylor, Kent D %A Thom, Simon %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wild, Sarah %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wright, Alan F %A Yao, Jie %A Thériault, Sébastien %A Conen, David %A Attia, John %A Sever, Peter %A Debette, Stephanie %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Spector, Tim D %A van der Harst, Pim %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Vergnaud, Anne-Claire %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Polasek, Ozren %A Starr, John M %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Hayward, Caroline %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Lindgren, Cecila M %A Vitart, Veronique %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Knekt, Paul %A Deary, Ian J %A Ciullo, Marina %A Elosua, Roberto %A Keavney, Bernard D %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Scott, Robert A %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Laan, Maris %A Liu, Yongmei %A Watkins, Hugh %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Perola, Markus %A Wilson, James F %A Schmidt, Helena %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Peters, Annette %A Rettig, Rainer %A James, Alan %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Strachan, David P %A Palmas, Walter %A Metspalu, Andres %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Franco, Oscar H %A Bochud, Murielle %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Elliott, Paul %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Knight, Joanne %A Morris, Andrew P %A Levy, Daniel %A Tobin, Martin D %A Snieder, Harold %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Ehret, Georg B %X

Elevated blood pressure is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease and has a substantial genetic contribution. Genetic variation influencing blood pressure has the potential to identify new pharmacological targets for the treatment of hypertension. To discover additional novel blood pressure loci, we used 1000 Genomes Project-based imputation in 150 134 European ancestry individuals and sought significant evidence for independent replication in a further 228 245 individuals. We report 6 new signals of association in or near HSPB7, TNXB, LRP12, LOC283335, SEPT9, and AKT2, and provide new replication evidence for a further 2 signals in EBF2 and NFKBIA Combining large whole-blood gene expression resources totaling 12 607 individuals, we investigated all novel and previously reported signals and identified 48 genes with evidence for involvement in blood pressure regulation that are significant in multiple resources. Three novel kidney-specific signals were also detected. These robustly implicated genes may provide new leads for therapeutic innovation.

%B Hypertension %8 2017 Jul 24 %G eng %R 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.117.09438 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2017 %T Rare coding variants in PLCG2, ABI3, and TREM2 implicate microglial-mediated innate immunity in Alzheimer's disease. %A Sims, Rebecca %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Naj, Adam C %A Bellenguez, Céline %A Badarinarayan, Nandini %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Kunkle, Brian W %A Boland, Anne %A Raybould, Rachel %A Bis, Joshua C %A Martin, Eden R %A Grenier-Boley, Benjamin %A Heilmann-Heimbach, Stefanie %A Chouraki, Vincent %A Kuzma, Amanda B %A Sleegers, Kristel %A Vronskaya, Maria %A Ruiz, Agustin %A Graham, Robert R %A Olaso, Robert %A Hoffmann, Per %A Grove, Megan L %A Vardarajan, Badri N %A Hiltunen, Mikko %A Nöthen, Markus M %A White, Charles C %A Hamilton-Nelson, Kara L %A Epelbaum, Jacques %A Maier, Wolfgang %A Choi, Seung-Hoan %A Beecham, Gary W %A Dulary, Cécile %A Herms, Stefan %A Smith, Albert V %A Funk, Cory C %A Derbois, Céline %A Forstner, Andreas J %A Ahmad, Shahzad %A Li, Hongdong %A Bacq, Delphine %A Harold, Denise %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Valladares, Otto %A Squassina, Alessio %A Thomas, Rhodri %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Qu, Liming %A Sánchez-Juan, Pascual %A Morgan, Taniesha %A Wolters, Frank J %A Zhao, Yi %A Garcia, Florentino Sanchez %A Denning, Nicola %A Fornage, Myriam %A Malamon, John %A Naranjo, Maria Candida Deniz %A Majounie, Elisa %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Dombroski, Beth %A Wallon, David %A Lupton, Michelle K %A Dupuis, Josée %A Whitehead, Patrice %A Fratiglioni, Laura %A Medway, Christopher %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Mukherjee, Shubhabrata %A Keller, Lina %A Brown, Kristelle %A Lin, Honghuang %A Cantwell, Laura B %A Panza, Francesco %A McGuinness, Bernadette %A Moreno-Grau, Sonia %A Burgess, Jeremy D %A Solfrizzi, Vincenzo %A Proitsi, Petra %A Adams, Hieab H %A Allen, Mariet %A Seripa, Davide %A Pastor, Pau %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Price, Nathan D %A Hannequin, Didier %A Frank-García, Ana %A Levy, Daniel %A Chakrabarty, Paramita %A Caffarra, Paolo %A Giegling, Ina %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Hampel, Harald %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Wang, Xue %A Lannfelt, Lars %A Mecocci, Patrizia %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Crane, Paul K %A Pasquier, Florence %A Boccardi, Virginia %A Henández, Isabel %A Barber, Robert C %A Scherer, Martin %A Tarraga, Lluis %A Adams, Perrie M %A Leber, Markus %A Chen, Yuning %A Albert, Marilyn S %A Riedel-Heller, Steffi %A Emilsson, Valur %A Beekly, Duane %A Braae, Anne %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Blacker, Deborah %A Masullo, Carlo %A Schmidt, Helena %A Doody, Rachelle S %A Spalletta, Gianfranco %A Jr, W T Longstreth %A Fairchild, Thomas J %A Bossù, Paola %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Frosch, Matthew P %A Sacchinelli, Eleonora %A Ghetti, Bernardino %A Yang, Qiong %A Huebinger, Ryan M %A Jessen, Frank %A Li, Shuo %A Kamboh, M Ilyas %A Morris, John %A Sotolongo-Grau, Oscar %A Katz, Mindy J %A Corcoran, Chris %A Dunstan, Melanie %A Braddel, Amy %A Thomas, Charlene %A Meggy, Alun %A Marshall, Rachel %A Gerrish, Amy %A Chapman, Jade %A Aguilar, Miquel %A Taylor, Sarah %A Hill, Matt %A Fairén, Mònica Díez %A Hodges, Angela %A Vellas, Bruno %A Soininen, Hilkka %A Kloszewska, Iwona %A Daniilidou, Makrina %A Uphill, James %A Patel, Yogen %A Hughes, Joseph T %A Lord, Jenny %A Turton, James %A Hartmann, Annette M %A Cecchetti, Roberta %A Fenoglio, Chiara %A Serpente, Maria %A Arcaro, Marina %A Caltagirone, Carlo %A Orfei, Maria Donata %A Ciaramella, Antonio %A Pichler, Sabrina %A Mayhaus, Manuel %A Gu, Wei %A Lleo, Alberto %A Fortea, Juan %A Blesa, Rafael %A Barber, Imelda S %A Brookes, Keeley %A Cupidi, Chiara %A Maletta, Raffaele Giovanni %A Carrell, David %A Sorbi, Sandro %A Moebus, Susanne %A Urbano, Maria %A Pilotto, Alberto %A Kornhuber, Johannes %A Bosco, Paolo %A Todd, Stephen %A Craig, David %A Johnston, Janet %A Gill, Michael %A Lawlor, Brian %A Lynch, Aoibhinn %A Fox, Nick C %A Hardy, John %A Albin, Roger L %A Apostolova, Liana G %A Arnold, Steven E %A Asthana, Sanjay %A Atwood, Craig S %A Baldwin, Clinton T %A Barnes, Lisa L %A Barral, Sandra %A Beach, Thomas G %A Becker, James T %A Bigio, Eileen H %A Bird, Thomas D %A Boeve, Bradley F %A Bowen, James D %A Boxer, Adam %A Burke, James R %A Burns, Jeffrey M %A Buxbaum, Joseph D %A Cairns, Nigel J %A Cao, Chuanhai %A Carlson, Chris S %A Carlsson, Cynthia M %A Carney, Regina M %A Carrasquillo, Minerva M %A Carroll, Steven L %A Diaz, Carolina Ceballos %A Chui, Helena C %A Clark, David G %A Cribbs, David H %A Crocco, Elizabeth A %A DeCarli, Charles %A Dick, Malcolm %A Duara, Ranjan %A Evans, Denis A %A Faber, Kelley M %A Fallon, Kenneth B %A Fardo, David W %A Farlow, Martin R %A Ferris, Steven %A Foroud, Tatiana M %A Galasko, Douglas R %A Gearing, Marla %A Geschwind, Daniel H %A Gilbert, John R %A Graff-Radford, Neill R %A Green, Robert C %A Growdon, John H %A Hamilton, Ronald L %A Harrell, Lindy E %A Honig, Lawrence S %A Huentelman, Matthew J %A Hulette, Christine M %A Hyman, Bradley T %A Jarvik, Gail P %A Abner, Erin %A Jin, Lee-Way %A Jun, Gyungah %A Karydas, Anna %A Kaye, Jeffrey A %A Kim, Ronald %A Kowall, Neil W %A Kramer, Joel H %A LaFerla, Frank M %A Lah, James J %A Leverenz, James B %A Levey, Allan I %A Li, Ge %A Lieberman, Andrew P %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Lyketsos, Constantine G %A Marson, Daniel C %A Martiniuk, Frank %A Mash, Deborah C %A Masliah, Eliezer %A McCormick, Wayne C %A McCurry, Susan M %A McDavid, Andrew N %A McKee, Ann C %A Mesulam, Marsel %A Miller, Bruce L %A Miller, Carol A %A Miller, Joshua W %A Morris, John C %A Murrell, Jill R %A Myers, Amanda J %A O'Bryant, Sid %A Olichney, John M %A Pankratz, Vernon S %A Parisi, Joseph E %A Paulson, Henry L %A Perry, William %A Peskind, Elaine %A Pierce, Aimee %A Poon, Wayne W %A Potter, Huntington %A Quinn, Joseph F %A Raj, Ashok %A Raskind, Murray %A Reisberg, Barry %A Reitz, Christiane %A Ringman, John M %A Roberson, Erik D %A Rogaeva, Ekaterina %A Rosen, Howard J %A Rosenberg, Roger N %A Sager, Mark A %A Saykin, Andrew J %A Schneider, Julie A %A Schneider, Lon S %A Seeley, William W %A Smith, Amanda G %A Sonnen, Joshua A %A Spina, Salvatore %A Stern, Robert A %A Swerdlow, Russell H %A Tanzi, Rudolph E %A Thornton-Wells, Tricia A %A Trojanowski, John Q %A Troncoso, Juan C %A Van Deerlin, Vivianna M %A Van Eldik, Linda J %A Vinters, Harry V %A Vonsattel, Jean Paul %A Weintraub, Sandra %A Welsh-Bohmer, Kathleen A %A Wilhelmsen, Kirk C %A Williamson, Jennifer %A Wingo, Thomas S %A Woltjer, Randall L %A Wright, Clinton B %A Yu, Chang-En %A Yu, Lei %A Garzia, Fabienne %A Golamaully, Feroze %A Septier, Gislain %A Engelborghs, Sebastien %A Vandenberghe, Rik %A De Deyn, Peter P %A Fernadez, Carmen Muñoz %A Benito, Yoland Aladro %A Thonberg, Håkan %A Forsell, Charlotte %A Lilius, Lena %A Kinhult-Ståhlbom, Anne %A Kilander, Lena %A Brundin, RoseMarie %A Concari, Letizia %A Helisalmi, Seppo %A Koivisto, Anne Maria %A Haapasalo, Annakaisa %A Dermecourt, Vincent %A Fiévet, Nathalie %A Hanon, Olivier %A Dufouil, Carole %A Brice, Alexis %A Ritchie, Karen %A Dubois, Bruno %A Himali, Jayanadra J %A Keene, C Dirk %A Tschanz, JoAnn %A Fitzpatrick, Annette L %A Kukull, Walter A %A Norton, Maria %A Aspelund, Thor %A Larson, Eric B %A Munger, Ron %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Lipton, Richard B %A Bullido, María J %A Hofman, Albert %A Montine, Thomas J %A Coto, Eliecer %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Petersen, Ronald C %A Alvarez, Victoria %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Reiman, Eric M %A Gallo, Maura %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Reisch, Joan S %A Bruni, Amalia Cecilia %A Royall, Donald R %A Dichgans, Martin %A Sano, Mary %A Galimberti, Daniela %A St George-Hyslop, Peter %A Scarpini, Elio %A Tsuang, Debby W %A Mancuso, Michelangelo %A Bonuccelli, Ubaldo %A Winslow, Ashley R %A Daniele, Antonio %A Wu, Chuang-Kuo %A Peters, Oliver %A Nacmias, Benedetta %A Riemenschneider, Matthias %A Heun, Reinhard %A Brayne, Carol %A Rubinsztein, David C %A Bras, Jose %A Guerreiro, Rita %A Al-Chalabi, Ammar %A Shaw, Christopher E %A Collinge, John %A Mann, David %A Tsolaki, Magda %A Clarimon, Jordi %A Sussams, Rebecca %A Lovestone, Simon %A O'Donovan, Michael C %A Owen, Michael J %A Behrens, Timothy W %A Mead, Simon %A Goate, Alison M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Holmes, Clive %A Cruchaga, Carlos %A Ingelsson, Martin %A Bennett, David A %A Powell, John %A Golde, Todd E %A Graff, Caroline %A De Jager, Philip L %A Morgan, Kevin %A Ertekin-Taner, Nilufer %A Combarros, Onofre %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Passmore, Peter %A Younkin, Steven G %A Berr, Claudine %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Rujescu, Dan %A Dickson, Dennis W %A Dartigues, Jean-François %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Ortega-Cubero, Sara %A Hakonarson, Hakon %A Campion, Dominique %A Boada, Merce %A Kauwe, John Keoni %A Farrer, Lindsay A %A Van Broeckhoven, Christine %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jones, Lesley %A Haines, Jonathan L %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Launer, Lenore J %A Escott-Price, Valentina %A Mayeux, Richard %A Deleuze, Jean-Francois %A Amin, Najaf %A Holmans, Peter A %A Pericak-Vance, Margaret A %A Amouyel, Philippe %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Ramirez, Alfredo %A Wang, Li-San %A Lambert, Jean-Charles %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Williams, Julie %A Schellenberg, Gerard D %K Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing %K Alzheimer Disease %K Amino Acid Sequence %K Case-Control Studies %K Exome %K Gene Expression Profiling %K Gene Frequency %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genotype %K Humans %K Immunity, Innate %K Linkage Disequilibrium %K Membrane Glycoproteins %K Microglia %K Odds Ratio %K Phospholipase C gamma %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Protein Interaction Maps %K Receptors, Immunologic %K Sequence Homology, Amino Acid %X

We identified rare coding variants associated with Alzheimer's disease in a three-stage case-control study of 85,133 subjects. In stage 1, we genotyped 34,174 samples using a whole-exome microarray. In stage 2, we tested associated variants (P < 1 × 10-4) in 35,962 independent samples using de novo genotyping and imputed genotypes. In stage 3, we used an additional 14,997 samples to test the most significant stage 2 associations (P < 5 × 10-8) using imputed genotypes. We observed three new genome-wide significant nonsynonymous variants associated with Alzheimer's disease: a protective variant in PLCG2 (rs72824905: p.Pro522Arg, P = 5.38 × 10-10, odds ratio (OR) = 0.68, minor allele frequency (MAF)cases = 0.0059, MAFcontrols = 0.0093), a risk variant in ABI3 (rs616338: p.Ser209Phe, P = 4.56 × 10-10, OR = 1.43, MAFcases = 0.011, MAFcontrols = 0.008), and a new genome-wide significant variant in TREM2 (rs143332484: p.Arg62His, P = 1.55 × 10-14, OR = 1.67, MAFcases = 0.0143, MAFcontrols = 0.0089), a known susceptibility gene for Alzheimer's disease. These protein-altering changes are in genes highly expressed in microglia and highlight an immune-related protein-protein interaction network enriched for previously identified risk genes in Alzheimer's disease. These genetic findings provide additional evidence that the microglia-mediated innate immune response contributes directly to the development of Alzheimer's disease.

%B Nat Genet %V 49 %P 1373-1384 %8 2017 Sep %G eng %N 9 %R 10.1038/ng.3916 %0 Journal Article %J Eur Heart J %D 2018 %T A comprehensive evaluation of the genetic architecture of sudden cardiac arrest. %A Ashar, Foram N %A Mitchell, Rebecca N %A Albert, Christine M %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Moes, Anna %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Mak, Angel %A Huikuri, Heikki %A Junttila, M Juhani %A Goyette, Philippe %A Pulit, Sara L %A Pazoki, Raha %A Tanck, Michael W %A Blom, Marieke T %A Zhao, XiaoQing %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Jabbari, Reza %A Glinge, Charlotte %A Tragante, Vinicius %A Escher, Stefan A %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Ehret, Georg %A Coresh, Josef %A Li, Man %A Prineas, Ronald J %A Franco, Oscar H %A Kwok, Pui-Yan %A Lumley, Thomas %A Dumas, Florence %A McKnight, Barbara %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Heckbert, Susan R %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Tardif, Jean-Claude %A VanDenburgh, Martin %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Stricker, Bruno H C %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Franks, Paul W %A Jansson, Jan-Håkan %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Halushka, Marc K %A Maleszewski, Joseph J %A Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob %A Engstrøm, Thomas %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Virmani, Renu %A Kolodgie, Frank %A Wilde, Arthur A M %A Tan, Hanno L %A Bezzina, Connie R %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Rioux, John D %A Jouven, Xavier %A Kääb, Stefan %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Siscovick, David S %A Arking, Dan E %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %X

Aims: Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) accounts for 10% of adult mortality in Western populations. We aim to identify potential loci associated with SCA and to identify risk factors causally associated with SCA.

Methods and results: We carried out a large genome-wide association study (GWAS) for SCA (n = 3939 cases, 25 989 non-cases) to examine common variation genome-wide and in candidate arrhythmia genes. We also exploited Mendelian randomization (MR) methods using cross-trait multi-variant genetic risk score associations (GRSA) to assess causal relationships of 18 risk factors with SCA. No variants were associated with SCA at genome-wide significance, nor were common variants in candidate arrhythmia genes associated with SCA at nominal significance. Using cross-trait GRSA, we established genetic correlation between SCA and (i) coronary artery disease (CAD) and traditional CAD risk factors (blood pressure, lipids, and diabetes), (ii) height and BMI, and (iii) electrical instability traits (QT and atrial fibrillation), suggesting aetiologic roles for these traits in SCA risk.

Conclusions: Our findings show that a comprehensive approach to the genetic architecture of SCA can shed light on the determinants of a complex life-threatening condition with multiple influencing factors in the general population. The results of this genetic analysis, both positive and negative findings, have implications for evaluating the genetic architecture of patients with a family history of SCA, and for efforts to prevent SCA in high-risk populations and the general community.

%B Eur Heart J %8 2018 Aug 28 %G eng %R 10.1093/eurheartj/ehy474 %0 Journal Article %J Blood %D 2018 %T DNA methylation age is associated with an altered hemostatic profile in a multi-ethnic meta-analysis. %A Ward-Caviness, Cavin K %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Evertt, Karl %A Germain, Marine %A van Dongen, Jenny %A Hill, W David %A Jhun, Min A %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Du, Lei %A Roetker, Nicholas S %A de Vries, Paul S %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Gieger, Christian %A Wolf, Petra %A Prokisch, Holger %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Levy, Daniel %A Liu, Chunyu %A Truong, Vinh %A Wells, Philip S %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Tang, Weihong %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A McKnight, Barbara %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Sotoodenia, Nona %A Boomsa, Dorret I %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Ligthart, Lannie %A Deary, Ian J %A Zhao, Wei %A Ware, Erin B %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Eriksson, Per %A Franco-Cereceda, Anders %A Pankow, James S %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Gagnon, France %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Starr, John M %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Björck, Hanna M %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Peters, Annette %X

Many hemostatic factors are associated with age and age-related diseases, however much remains unknown about the biological mechanisms linking aging and hemostatic factors. DNA methylation is a novel means by which to assess epigenetic aging, which is a measure of age and the aging processes as determined by altered epigenetic states. We used a meta-analysis approach to examine the association between measures of epigenetic aging and hemostatic factors, as well as a clotting time measure. For fibrinogen, we used European and African-ancestry participants who were meta-analyzed separately and combined via a random effects meta-analysis. All other measures only included participants of European-ancestry. We found that 1-year higher extrinsic epigenetic age as compared to chronological age was associated with higher fibrinogen (0.004 g/L per year; 95% CI: 0.001, 0.007; P = 0.01) and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1; 0.13 U/mL per year; 95% CI: 0.07, 0.20; P = 6.6x10-5) concentrations as well as lower activated partial thromboplastin time, a measure of clotting time. We replicated PAI-1 associations using an independent cohort. To further elucidate potential functional mechanisms we associated epigenetic aging with expression levels of the PAI-1 protein encoding gene (SERPINE1) and the three fibrinogen subunit-encoding genes (FGA, FGG, and FGB), in both peripheral blood and aorta intima-media samples. We observed associations between accelerated epigenetic aging and transcription of FGG in both tissues. Collectively, our results indicate that accelerated epigenetic aging is associated with a pro-coagulation hemostatic profile, and that epigenetic aging may regulate hemostasis in part via gene transcription.

%B Blood %8 2018 Jul 24 %G eng %R 10.1182/blood-2018-02-831347 %0 Journal Article %J Stroke %D 2018 %T Exome Chip Analysis Identifies Low-Frequency and Rare Variants in for White Matter Hyperintensities on Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging. %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Smith, Albert V %A Wittfeld, Katharina %A Bis, Joshua C %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Nho, Kwangsik %A Hofer, Edith %A Hagenaars, Saskia P %A Nyquist, Paul A %A Mishra, Aniket %A Adams, Hieab H H %A Li, Shuo %A Teumer, Alexander %A Zhao, Wei %A Freedman, Barry I %A Saba, Yasaman %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A van Buchem, Mark A %A Cushman, Mary %A Royle, Natalie A %A Bryan, R Nick %A Niessen, Wiro J %A Windham, Beverly G %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Habes, Mohamad %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Lewis, Cora E %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Maillard, Pauline %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Homuth, Georg %A Valdés-Hernández, Maria Del C %A Divers, Jasmin %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Langner, Sönke %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Bastin, Mark E %A Yang, Qiong %A Maldjian, Joseph A %A Starr, John M %A Sidney, Stephen %A Risacher, Shannon L %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Gudnason, Vilmundur G %A Nauck, Matthias %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Mazoyer, Bernard %A von Sarnowski, Bettina %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Levy, Daniel %A Sigurdsson, Sigurdur %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Turner, Stephen T %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Mosley, Thomas H %A DeCarli, Charles S %A Saykin, Andrew J %A Bowden, Donald W %A Becker, Diane M %A Deary, Ian J %A Schmidt, Helena %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Debette, Stephanie %A Grabe, Hans J %A Longstreth, W T %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Launer, Lenore J %A Fornage, Myriam %X

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: White matter hyperintensities (WMH) on brain magnetic resonance imaging are typical signs of cerebral small vessel disease and may indicate various preclinical, age-related neurological disorders, such as stroke. Though WMH are highly heritable, known common variants explain a small proportion of the WMH variance. The contribution of low-frequency/rare coding variants to WMH burden has not been explored.

METHODS: In the discovery sample we recruited 20 719 stroke/dementia-free adults from 13 population-based cohort studies within the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium, among which 17 790 were of European ancestry and 2929 of African ancestry. We genotyped these participants at ≈250 000 mostly exonic variants with Illumina HumanExome BeadChip arrays. We performed ethnicity-specific linear regression on rank-normalized WMH in each study separately, which were then combined in meta-analyses to test for association with single variants and genes aggregating the effects of putatively functional low-frequency/rare variants. We then sought replication of the top findings in 1192 adults (European ancestry) with whole exome/genome sequencing data from 2 independent studies.

RESULTS: At 17q25, we confirmed the association of multiple common variants in , , and (<6×10). We also identified a novel association with 2 low-frequency nonsynonymous variants in (lead, rs34136221; =4.5×10) partially independent of known common signal (=1.4×10). We further identified a locus at 2q33 containing common variants in , , and (lead, rs2351524; =1.9×10). Although our novel findings were not replicated because of limited power and possible differences in study design, meta-analysis of the discovery and replication samples yielded stronger association for the 2 low-frequency variants (=2.8×10).

CONCLUSIONS: Both common and low-frequency/rare functional variants influence WMH. Larger replication and experimental follow-up are essential to confirm our findings and uncover the biological causal mechanisms of age-related WMH.

%B Stroke %8 2018 Jul 12 %G eng %R 10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.020689 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2018 %T Genetic analysis of over 1 million people identifies 535 new loci associated with blood pressure traits. %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Warren, Helen R %A Mosen-Ansorena, David %A Mifsud, Borbala %A Pazoki, Raha %A Gao, He %A Ntritsos, Georgios %A Dimou, Niki %A Cabrera, Claudia P %A Karaman, Ibrahim %A Ng, Fu Liang %A Evangelou, Marina %A Witkowska, Katarzyna %A Tzanis, Evan %A Hellwege, Jacklyn N %A Giri, Ayush %A Velez Edwards, Digna R %A Sun, Yan V %A Cho, Kelly %A Gaziano, J Michael %A Wilson, Peter W F %A Tsao, Philip S %A Kovesdy, Csaba P %A Esko, Tõnu %A Mägi, Reedik %A Milani, Lili %A Almgren, Peter %A Boutin, Thibaud %A Debette, Stephanie %A Ding, Jun %A Giulianini, Franco %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Jackson, Anne U %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Lin, Wei-Yu %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mangino, Massimo %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Prins, Bram Peter %A Qian, Yong %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Shah, Nabi %A Surendran, Praveen %A Thériault, Sébastien %A Verweij, Niek %A Willems, Sara M %A Zhao, Jing-Hua %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Connell, John %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Doney, Alex S F %A Farrall, Martin %A Menni, Cristina %A Morris, Andrew D %A Noordam, Raymond %A Paré, Guillaume %A Poulter, Neil R %A Shields, Denis C %A Stanton, Alice %A Thom, Simon %A Abecasis, Goncalo %A Amin, Najaf %A Arking, Dan E %A Ayers, Kristin L %A Barbieri, Caterina M %A Batini, Chiara %A Bis, Joshua C %A Blake, Tineka %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boehnke, Michael %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Braund, Peter S %A Brumat, Marco %A Campbell, Archie %A Campbell, Harry %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chambers, John C %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Ciullo, Marina %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Collins, Francis %A Cordell, Heather J %A Davies, Gail %A Borst, Martin H de %A Geus, Eco J de %A Deary, Ian J %A Deelen, Joris %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Demirkale, Cumhur Yusuf %A Dörr, Marcus %A Ehret, Georg B %A Elosua, Roberto %A Enroth, Stefan %A Erzurumluoglu, A Mesut %A Ferreira, Teresa %A Frånberg, Mattias %A Franco, Oscar H %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Gieger, Christian %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Goel, Anuj %A Gow, Alan J %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hofer, Edith %A Hofman, Albert %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Ingelsson, Erik %A James, Alan %A Jansen, Rick %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Joehanes, Roby %A Johansson, Asa %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Joshi, Peter K %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Jula, Antti %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Keavney, Bernard D %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Knekt, Paul %A Knight, Joanne %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Koskinen, Seppo %A Kristiansson, Kati %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Laan, Maris %A Larson, Marty %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liewald, David C M %A Lin, Li %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Liu, Yongmei %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lopez, Lorna M %A Lu, Yingchang %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Mamasoula, Chrysovalanto %A Marrugat, Jaume %A Marten, Jonathan %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Morgan, Anna %A Morris, Andrew P %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Munson, Peter J %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nandakumar, Priyanka %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Niiranen, Teemu %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Nutile, Teresa %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Oostra, Ben A %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Org, Elin %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Palmas, Walter %A Palotie, Aarno %A Pattie, Alison %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Annette %A Polasek, Ozren %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Nguyen, Quang Tri %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Ren, Meixia %A Rettig, Rainer %A Rice, Kenneth %A Ridker, Paul M %A Ried, Janina S %A Riese, Harriëtte %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Saba, Yasaman %A Sala, Cinzia F %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Sarin, Antti-Pekka %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schmidt, Helena %A Shrine, Nick %A Siscovick, David %A Smith, Albert V %A Snieder, Harold %A Sõber, Siim %A Sorice, Rossella %A Starr, John M %A Stott, David J %A Strachan, David P %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Sundström, Johan %A Swertz, Morris A %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Tobin, Martin D %A Tomaszewski, Maciej %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Traglia, Michela %A Trompet, Stella %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaez, Ahmad %A van der Most, Peter J %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Vergnaud, Anne-Claire %A Verwoert, Germaine C %A Vitart, Veronique %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Vuckovic, Dragana %A Watkins, Hugh %A Wild, Sarah H %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilson, James F %A Wright, Alan F %A Yao, Jie %A Zemunik, Tatijana %A Zhang, Weihua %A Attia, John R %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Conen, David %A Cucca, Francesco %A Danesh, John %A Hayward, Caroline %A Howson, Joanna M M %A Laakso, Markku %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Melander, Olle %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Risch, Lorenz %A Scott, Robert A %A Scott, Rodney J %A Sever, Peter %A Spector, Tim D %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Levy, Daniel %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Brown, Morris J %A Metspalu, Andres %A Hung, Adriana M %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Edwards, Todd L %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Barnes, Michael R %A Wain, Louise V %A Elliott, Paul %A Caulfield, Mark J %X

High blood pressure is a highly heritable and modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease. We report the largest genetic association study of blood pressure traits (systolic, diastolic and pulse pressure) to date in over 1 million people of European ancestry. We identify 535 novel blood pressure loci that not only offer new biological insights into blood pressure regulation but also highlight shared genetic architecture between blood pressure and lifestyle exposures. Our findings identify new biological pathways for blood pressure regulation with potential for improved cardiovascular disease prevention in the future.

%B Nat Genet %V 50 %P 1412-1425 %8 2018 Oct %G eng %N 10 %R 10.1038/s41588-018-0205-x %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2018 %T Genome Analyses of >200,000 Individuals Identify 58 Loci for Chronic Inflammation and Highlight Pathways that Link Inflammation and Complex Disorders. %A Ligthart, Symen %A Vaez, Ahmad %A Võsa, Urmo %A Stathopoulou, Maria G %A de Vries, Paul S %A Prins, Bram P %A van der Most, Peter J %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Naderi, Elnaz %A Rose, Lynda M %A Wu, Ying %A Karlsson, Robert %A Barbalic, Maja %A Lin, Honghuang %A Pool, Rene %A Zhu, Gu %A Mace, Aurelien %A Sidore, Carlo %A Trompet, Stella %A Mangino, Massimo %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Kemp, John P %A Abbasi, Ali %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Verweij, Niek %A Smith, Albert V %A Huang, Tao %A Marzi, Carola %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Mueller, Christian %A Huq, Mahmudul %A Vlachopoulou, Efthymia %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Deelen, Joris %A Perola, Markus %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Feenstra, Bjarke %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Lahti, Jari %A Schraut, Katharina E %A Fornage, Myriam %A Suktitipat, Bhoom %A Chen, Wei-Min %A Li, Xiaohui %A Nutile, Teresa %A Malerba, Giovanni %A Luan, Jian'an %A Bak, Tom %A Schork, Nicholas %A del Greco M, Fabiola %A Thiering, Elisabeth %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Mihailov, Evelin %A Eriksson, Joel %A Ozel, Ayse Bilge %A Zhang, Weihua %A Nethander, Maria %A Cheng, Yu-Ching %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Ang, Wei %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Yengo, Loic %A Portas, Laura %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Hofer, Edith %A Rajan, Kumar B %A Schurmann, Claudia %A den Hollander, Wouter %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Zhao, Jing %A Draisma, Harmen H M %A Ford, Ian %A Timpson, Nicholas %A Teumer, Alexander %A Huang, Hongyan %A Wahl, Simone %A Liu, Yongmei %A Huang, Jie %A Uh, Hae-Won %A Geller, Frank %A Joshi, Peter K %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Trabetti, Elisabetta %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Vozzi, Diego %A Verbanck, Marie %A Biino, Ginevra %A Saba, Yasaman %A Meulenbelt, Ingrid %A O'Connell, Jeff R %A Laakso, Markku %A Giulianini, Franco %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Ballantyne, Christie M %A Hottenga, Jouke Jan %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Rivadineira, Fernando %A Rueedi, Rico %A Steri, Maristella %A Herzig, Karl-Heinz %A Stott, David J %A Menni, Cristina %A Frånberg, Mattias %A St Pourcain, Beate %A Felix, Stephan B %A Pers, Tune H %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Kraft, Peter %A Peters, Annette %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A Delgado, Graciela %A Smit, Johannes H %A Großmann, Vera %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Williams, Stephen R %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Moed, Matthijs %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Campbell, Harry %A Sale, Michèle M %A Chen, Yii-der I %A James, Alan L %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Smith, Erin N %A Berenson, Gerald S %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Hernandez, Dena %A Tiesler, Carla M T %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Liewald, David %A Fischer, Krista %A Mellström, Dan %A Larsson, Anders %A Wang, Yunmei %A Scott, William R %A Lorentzon, Matthias %A Beilby, John %A Ryan, Kathleen A %A Pennell, Craig E %A Vuckovic, Dragana %A Balkau, Beverly %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Mendes de Leon, Carlos F %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Kloppenburg, Margreet %A Paternoster, Lavinia %A Boehnke, Michael %A Musk, A W %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Evans, David M %A Madden, Pamela A F %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Zoledziewska, Magdalena %A Karhunen, Ville %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Sattar, Naveed %A Lachance, Genevieve %A Clarke, Robert %A Harris, Tamara B %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Attia, John R %A van Heemst, Diana %A Kajantie, Eero %A Sorice, Rossella %A Gambaro, Giovanni %A Scott, Robert A %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Standl, Marie %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Starr, John M %A Karlsson, Magnus %A Lind, Lars %A Li, Jun Z %A Chambers, John C %A Mori, Trevor A %A de Geus, Eco J C N %A Heath, Andrew C %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Auvinen, Juha %A Buckley, Brendan M %A de Craen, Anton J M %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Scott, Rodney J %A McEvoy, Mark %A Beekman, Marian %A Bombieri, Cristina %A Ridker, Paul M %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Whitfield, John B %A Strachan, David P %A Hofman, Albert %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Cucca, Francesco %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Spector, Tim D %A Hamsten, Anders %A Zeller, Tanja %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Nauck, Matthias %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Qi, Lu %A Grallert, Harald %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Rotter, Jerome I %A März, Winfried %A Wild, Philipp S %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A Boyle, Michael %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Melbye, Mads %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Wilson, James F %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Becker, Diane M %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Gibson, Greg %A Krauss, Ronald M %A Ciullo, Marina %A Zaza, Gianluigi %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Murray, Sarah S %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Deary, Ian J %A Mägi, Reedik %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A van der Harst, Pim %A Desch, Karl C %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Hayward, Caroline %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Arnett, Donna K %A Beilin, Lawrence J %A Robino, Antonietta %A Froguel, Philippe %A Pirastu, Mario %A Jess, Tine %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Evans, Denis A %A Schmidt, Helena %A Smith, George Davey %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Morris, Andrew P %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tracy, Russell P %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Visvikis-Siest, Sophie %A Reiner, Alex P %A Gross, Myron %A Bis, Joshua C %A Franke, Lude %A Franco, Oscar H %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Dupuis, Josée %A Snieder, Harold %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Alizadeh, Behrooz Z %X

C-reactive protein (CRP) is a sensitive biomarker of chronic low-grade inflammation and is associated with multiple complex diseases. The genetic determinants of chronic inflammation remain largely unknown, and the causal role of CRP in several clinical outcomes is debated. We performed two genome-wide association studies (GWASs), on HapMap and 1000 Genomes imputed data, of circulating amounts of CRP by using data from 88 studies comprising 204,402 European individuals. Additionally, we performed in silico functional analyses and Mendelian randomization analyses with several clinical outcomes. The GWAS meta-analyses of CRP revealed 58 distinct genetic loci (p < 5 × 10). After adjustment for body mass index in the regression analysis, the associations at all except three loci remained. The lead variants at the distinct loci explained up to 7.0% of the variance in circulating amounts of CRP. We identified 66 gene sets that were organized in two substantially correlated clusters, one mainly composed of immune pathways and the other characterized by metabolic pathways in the liver. Mendelian randomization analyses revealed a causal protective effect of CRP on schizophrenia and a risk-increasing effect on bipolar disorder. Our findings provide further insights into the biology of inflammation and could lead to interventions for treating inflammation and its clinical consequences.

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 103 %P 691-706 %8 2018 Nov 01 %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.09.009 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T Genome-wide analyses identify a role for SLC17A4 and AADAT in thyroid hormone regulation. %A Teumer, Alexander %A Chaker, Layal %A Groeneweg, Stefan %A Li, Yong %A Di Munno, Celia %A Barbieri, Caterina %A Schultheiss, Ulla T %A Traglia, Michela %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Akiyama, Masato %A Appel, Emil Vincent R %A Arking, Dan E %A Arnold, Alice %A Astrup, Arne %A Beekman, Marian %A Beilby, John P %A Bekaert, Sofie %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brown, Suzanne J %A De Buyzere, Marc %A Campbell, Purdey J %A Ceresini, Graziano %A Cerqueira, Charlotte %A Cucca, Francesco %A Deary, Ian J %A Deelen, Joris %A Eckardt, Kai-Uwe %A Ekici, Arif B %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Ferrrucci, Luigi %A Fiers, Tom %A Fiorillo, Edoardo %A Ford, Ian %A Fox, Caroline S %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Galesloot, Tessel E %A Gieger, Christian %A Gögele, Martin %A De Grandi, Alessandro %A Grarup, Niels %A Greiser, Karin Halina %A Haljas, Kadri %A Hansen, Torben %A Harris, Sarah E %A van Heemst, Diana %A den Heijer, Martin %A Hicks, Andrew A %A den Hollander, Wouter %A Homuth, Georg %A Hui, Jennie %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Ittermann, Till %A Jensen, Richard A %A Jing, Jiaojiao %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kajantie, Eero %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kasbohm, Elisa %A Kaufman, Jean-Marc %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A %A Kloppenburg, Margreet %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Lahti, Jari %A Lapauw, Bruno %A Li, Shuo %A Liewald, David C M %A Lim, Ee Mun %A Linneberg, Allan %A Marina, Michela %A Mascalzoni, Deborah %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Medenwald, Daniel %A Meisinger, Christa %A Meulenbelt, Ingrid %A De Meyer, Tim %A Meyer zu Schwabedissen, Henriette E %A Mikolajczyk, Rafael %A Moed, Matthijs %A Netea-Maier, Romana T %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Okada, Yukinori %A Pala, Mauro %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Porcu, Eleonora %A Postmus, Iris %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ramos, Yolande F M %A Rawal, Rajesh %A Redmond, Paul %A Richards, J Brent %A Rietzschel, Ernst R %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Roef, Greet %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sala, Cinzia F %A Schlessinger, David %A Selvin, Elizabeth %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Sørensen, Thorkild I A %A Spector, Timothy D %A Starr, John M %A Stott, David J %A Taes, Youri %A Taliun, Daniel %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Thuesen, Betina %A Tiller, Daniel %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Visser, W Edward %A Walsh, John P %A Wilson, Scott G %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Yang, Qiong %A Zheng, Hou-Feng %A Cappola, Anne %A Peeters, Robin P %A Naitza, Silvia %A Völzke, Henry %A Sanna, Serena %A Köttgen, Anna %A Visser, Theo J %A Medici, Marco %X

Thyroid dysfunction is an important public health problem, which affects 10% of the general population and increases the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Many aspects of thyroid hormone regulation have only partly been elucidated, including its transport, metabolism, and genetic determinants. Here we report a large meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for thyroid function and dysfunction, testing 8 million genetic variants in up to 72,167 individuals. One-hundred-and-nine independent genetic variants are associated with these traits. A genetic risk score, calculated to assess their combined effects on clinical end points, shows significant associations with increased risk of both overt (Graves' disease) and subclinical thyroid disease, as well as clinical complications. By functional follow-up on selected signals, we identify a novel thyroid hormone transporter (SLC17A4) and a metabolizing enzyme (AADAT). Together, these results provide new knowledge about thyroid hormone physiology and disease, opening new possibilities for therapeutic targets.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 4455 %8 2018 10 26 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-06356-1 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T Genome-wide association study in 79,366 European-ancestry individuals informs the genetic architecture of 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels. %A Jiang, Xia %A O'Reilly, Paul F %A Aschard, Hugues %A Hsu, Yi-Hsiang %A Richards, J Brent %A Dupuis, Josée %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Karasik, David %A Pilz, Stefan %A Berry, Diane %A Kestenbaum, Bryan %A Zheng, Jusheng %A Luan, Jianan %A Sofianopoulou, Eleni %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Albanes, Demetrius %A Lutsey, Pamela L %A Yao, Lu %A Tang, Weihong %A Econs, Michael J %A Wallaschofski, Henri %A Völzke, Henry %A Zhou, Ang %A Power, Chris %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Michos, Erin D %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Weinstein, Stephanie J %A Freedman, Neal D %A Huang, Wen-Yi %A van Schoor, Natasja M %A van der Velde, Nathalie %A Groot, Lisette C P G M de %A Enneman, Anke %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Booth, Sarah L %A Vasan, Ramachandran S %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Ohlsson, Claes %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Shea, M Kyla %A Houston, Denise K %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Liu, Yongmei %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Peacock, Munro %A Gieger, Christian %A Beekman, Marian %A Slagboom, Eline %A Deelen, Joris %A Heemst, Diana van %A Kleber, Marcus E %A März, Winfried %A de Boer, Ian H %A Wood, Alexis C %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rich, Stephen S %A Robinson-Cohen, Cassianne %A den Heijer, Martin %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Cavadino, Alana %A Joshi, Peter K %A Wilson, James F %A Hayward, Caroline %A Lind, Lars %A Michaëlsson, Karl %A Trompet, Stella %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Broer, Linda %A Zgaga, Lina %A Campbell, Harry %A Theodoratou, Evropi %A Farrington, Susan M %A Timofeeva, Maria %A Dunlop, Malcolm G %A Valdes, Ana M %A Tikkanen, Emmi %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Kähönen, Mika %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Sattar, Naveed %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Gundersen, Thomas E %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Danesh, John %A Spector, Timothy %A Wang, Thomas J %A Hyppönen, Elina %A Kraft, Peter %A Kiel, Douglas P %X

Vitamin D is a steroid hormone precursor that is associated with a range of human traits and diseases. Previous GWAS of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations have identified four genome-wide significant loci (GC, NADSYN1/DHCR7, CYP2R1, CYP24A1). In this study, we expand the previous SUNLIGHT Consortium GWAS discovery sample size from 16,125 to 79,366 (all European descent). This larger GWAS yields two additional loci harboring genome-wide significant variants (P = 4.7×10 at rs8018720 in SEC23A, and P = 1.9×10 at rs10745742 in AMDHD1). The overall estimate of heritability of 25-hydroxyvitamin D serum concentrations attributable to GWAS common SNPs is 7.5%, with statistically significant loci explaining 38% of this total. Further investigation identifies signal enrichment in immune and hematopoietic tissues, and clustering with autoimmune diseases in cell-type-specific analysis. Larger studies are required to identify additional common SNPs, and to explore the role of rare or structural variants and gene-gene interactions in the heritability of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 260 %8 2018 Jan 17 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-017-02662-2 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T Genome-wide association study of 23,500 individuals identifies 7 loci associated with brain ventricular volume. %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Adams, Hieab H %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Yang, Qiong %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Bis, Joshua C %A Teumer, Alexander %A Scholz, Markus %A Armstrong, Nicola J %A Hofer, Edith %A Saba, Yasaman %A Luciano, Michelle %A Bernard, Manon %A Trompet, Stella %A Yang, Jingyun %A Gillespie, Nathan A %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Neumann, Alexander %A Ahmad, Shahzad %A Andreassen, Ole A %A Ames, David %A Amin, Najaf %A Arfanakis, Konstantinos %A Bastin, Mark E %A Becker, Diane M %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Beyer, Frauke %A Brodaty, Henry %A Bryan, R Nick %A Bülow, Robin %A Dale, Anders M %A De Jager, Philip L %A Deary, Ian J %A DeCarli, Charles %A Fleischman, Debra A %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A van der Grond, Jeroen %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Homuth, Georg %A Knopman, David S %A Kwok, John B %A Lewis, Cora E %A Li, Shuo %A Loeffler, Markus %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Maillard, Pauline %A El Marroun, Hanan %A Mather, Karen A %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Muetzel, Ryan L %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nyquist, Paul A %A Panizzon, Matthew S %A Pausova, Zdenka %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rice, Ken %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Royle, Natalie %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schofield, Peter R %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Sidney, Stephen %A Stott, David J %A Thalamuthu, Anbupalam %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Valdés Hernández, Maria C %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Wen, Wei %A White, Tonya %A Witte, A Veronica %A Wittfeld, Katharina %A Wright, Margaret J %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Kremen, William S %A Bennett, David A %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Paus, Tomáš %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Schmidt, Helena %A Sachdev, Perminder S %A Villringer, Arno %A Grabe, Hans Jörgen %A Longstreth, W T %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Launer, Lenore J %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Fornage, Myriam %X

The volume of the lateral ventricles (LV) increases with age and their abnormal enlargement is a key feature of several neurological and psychiatric diseases. Although lateral ventricular volume is heritable, a comprehensive investigation of its genetic determinants is lacking. In this meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of 23,533 healthy middle-aged to elderly individuals from 26 population-based cohorts, we identify 7 genetic loci associated with LV volume. These loci map to chromosomes 3q28, 7p22.3, 10p12.31, 11q23.1, 12q23.3, 16q24.2, and 22q13.1 and implicate pathways related to tau pathology, S1P signaling, and cytoskeleton organization. We also report a significant genetic overlap between the thalamus and LV volumes (ρ = -0.59, p-value = 3.14 × 10), suggesting that these brain structures may share a common biology. These genetic associations of LV volume provide insights into brain morphology.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 3945 %8 2018 Sep 26 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-06234-w %0 Journal Article %J Circulation %D 2018 %T Genome-Wide Association Trans-Ethnic Meta-Analyses Identifies Novel Associations Regulating Coagulation Factor VIII and von Willebrand Factor Plasma Levels. %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A de Vries, Paul S %A Marten, Jonathan %A Mastrangelo, Michael A %A Song, Ci %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Ward-Caviness, Cavin K %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Trompet, Stella %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Bartz, Traci M %A Martinez-Perez, Angel %A Germain, Marine %A de Haan, Hugoline G %A Ozel, Ayse B %A Polasek, Ozren %A Smith, Albert V %A Eicher, John D %A Reiner, Alex P %A Tang, Weihong %A Davies, Neil M %A Stott, David J %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Welsh, Paul %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A Soria, José Manuel %A Suchon, Pierre %A van Hylckama Vlieg, Astrid %A Desch, Karl C %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Joshi, Peter K %A Launer, Lenore J %A Harris, Tamara B %A Campbell, Harry %A Rudan, Igor %A Becker, Diane M %A Li, Jun Z %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Hofman, Albert %A Franco, Oscar H %A Cushman, Mary %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A McKnight, Barbara %A Chong, Michael R %A Fernandez-Cadenas, Israel %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Lindgren, Arne %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Wilson, James F %A Hayward, Caroline %A Ginsburg, David %A Fornage, Myriam %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Souto, Juan Carlos %A Becker, Lewis C %A Jenny, Nancy S %A März, Winfried %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Johnson, Andrew D %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Strachan, David P %A Lowenstein, Charles J %A Smith, Nicholas L %X

BACKGROUND: Factor VIII (FVIII) and its carrier protein von Willebrand factor (VWF) are associated with risk of arterial and venous thrombosis and with hemorrhagic disorders. We aimed to identify and functionally test novel genetic associations regulating plasma FVIII and VWF.

METHODS: We meta-analyzed genome-wide association results from 46,354 individuals of European, African, East Asian, and Hispanic ancestry. All studies performed linear regression analysis using an additive genetic model and associated approximately 35 million imputed variants with natural-log transformed phenotype levels. In vitro gene silencing in cultured endothelial cells was performed for candidate genes to provide additional evidence on association and function. Two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses were applied to test the causal role of FVIII and VWF plasma levels on the risk of arterial and venous thrombotic events.

RESULTS: We identified 13 novel genome-wide significant (p≤2.5x10) associations; 7 with FVIII levels ( FCHO2/TMEM171/TNPO1, HLA, SOX17/RP1, LINC00583/NFIB, RAB5C-KAT2A, RPL3/TAB1/SYNGR1, and ARSA) and 11 with VWF levels ( PDHB/PXK/KCTD6, SLC39A8, FCHO2/TMEM171/TNPO1, HLA, GIMAP7/GIMAP4, OR13C5/NIPSNAP, DAB2IP, C2CD4B, RAB5C-KAT2A, TAB1/SYNGR1, and ARSA), beyond 10 previously reported associations with these phenotypes. Functional validation provided further evidence of association for all loci on VWF except ARSA and DAB2IP. MR suggested causal effects of plasma FVIII activity levels on venous thrombosis and coronary artery disease risk and plasma VWF levels on ischemic stroke risk.

CONCLUSIONS: The meta-analysis identified 13 novel genetic loci regulating FVIII and VWF plasma levels, 10 of which we validated functionally. We provide some evidence for a causal role of these proteins in thrombotic events.

%B Circulation %8 2018 Nov 20 %G eng %R 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.118.034532 %0 Journal Article %J Pharmacogenomics J %D 2018 %T Genome-wide meta-analysis of SNP-by9-ACEI/ARB and SNP-by-thiazide diuretic and effect on serum potassium in cohorts of European and African ancestry. %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Noordam, Raymond %A Avery, Christie L %A Bis, Joshua C %A Floyd, James S %A Li, Jin %A Limdi, Nita A %A Srinivasasainagendra, Vinodh %A Stewart, James %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Lipovich, Leonard %A Kleinbrink, Erica L %A Smith, Albert %A Bartz, Traci M %A Whitsel, Eric A %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Wilson, James G %A Zhi, Degui %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Arnett, Donna K %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Lange, Leslie A %X

We evaluated interactions of SNP-by-ACE-I/ARB and SNP-by-TD on serum potassium (K+) among users of antihypertensive treatments (anti-HTN). Our study included seven European-ancestry (EA) (N = 4835) and four African-ancestry (AA) cohorts (N = 2016). We performed race-stratified, fixed-effect, inverse-variance-weighted meta-analyses of 2.5 million SNP-by-drug interaction estimates; race-combined meta-analysis; and trans-ethnic fine-mapping. Among EAs, we identified 11 significant SNPs (P < 5 × 10) for SNP-ACE-I/ARB interactions on serum K+ that were located between NR2F1-AS1 and ARRDC3-AS1 on chromosome 5 (top SNP rs6878413 P = 1.7 × 10; ratio of serum K+ in ACE-I/ARB exposed compared to unexposed is 1.0476, 1.0280, 1.0088 for the TT, AT, and AA genotypes, respectively). Trans-ethnic fine mapping identified the same group of SNPs on chromosome 5 as genome-wide significant for the ACE-I/ARB analysis. In conclusion, SNP-by-ACE-I /ARB interaction analyses uncovered loci that, if replicated, could have future implications for the prevention of arrhythmias due to anti-HTN treatment-related hyperkalemia. Before these loci can be identified as clinically relevant, future validation studies of equal or greater size in comparison to our discovery effort are needed.

%B Pharmacogenomics J %8 2018 Jun 01 %G eng %R 10.1038/s41397-018-0021-9 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T GWAS and colocalization analyses implicate carotid intima-media thickness and carotid plaque loci in cardiovascular outcomes. %A Franceschini, Nora %A Giambartolomei, Claudia %A de Vries, Paul S %A Finan, Chris %A Bis, Joshua C %A Huntley, Rachael P %A Lovering, Ruth C %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Graff, Misa %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Dale, Caroline %A Smith, Albert V %A Hofer, Edith %A van Leeuwen, Elisabeth M %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Lu, Lingyi %A Scholz, Markus %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Pitkänen, Niina %A Franzén, Oscar %A Joshi, Peter K %A Noordam, Raymond %A Marioni, Riccardo E %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Musani, Solomon K %A Schminke, Ulf %A Palmas, Walter %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Correa, Adolfo %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Hofman, Albert %A Teumer, Alexander %A Cox, Amanda J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wong, Andrew %A Smit, Andries J %A Newman, Anne B %A Britton, Annie %A Ruusalepp, Arno %A Sennblad, Bengt %A Hedblad, Bo %A Pasaniuc, Bogdan %A Penninx, Brenda W %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Wassel, Christina L %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Fava, Cristiano %A Baldassarre, Damiano %A O'Leary, Daniel H %A Teupser, Daniel %A Kuh, Diana %A Tremoli, Elena %A Mannarino, Elmo %A Grossi, Enzo %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Schadt, Eric E %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Veglia, Fabrizio %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Beutner, Frank %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Snieder, Harold %A Campbell, Harry %A Völzke, Henry %A Markus, Hugh S %A Deary, Ian J %A Jukema, J Wouter %A de Graaf, Jacqueline %A Price, Jacqueline %A Pott, Janne %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Liang, Jingjing %A Thiery, Joachim %A Engmann, Jorgen %A Gertow, Karl %A Rice, Kenneth %A Taylor, Kent D %A Dhana, Klodian %A Kiemeney, Lambertus A L M %A Lind, Lars %A Raffield, Laura M %A Launer, Lenore J %A Holdt, Lesca M %A Dörr, Marcus %A Dichgans, Martin %A Traylor, Matthew %A Sitzer, Matthias %A Kumari, Meena %A Kivimaki, Mika %A Nalls, Mike A %A Melander, Olle %A Raitakari, Olli %A Franco, Oscar H %A Rueda-Ochoa, Oscar L %A Roussos, Panos %A Whincup, Peter H %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Giral, Philippe %A Anugu, Pramod %A Wong, Quenna %A Malik, Rainer %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Burkhardt, Ralph %A Hardy, Rebecca %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Morris, Richard W %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Wannamethee, S Goya %A Hägg, Sara %A Shah, Sonia %A McLachlan, Stela %A Trompet, Stella %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Kurl, Sudhir %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Ring, Susan %A Harris, Tamara B %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Galesloot, Tessel E %A Shah, Tina %A de Faire, Ulf %A Plagnol, Vincent %A Rosamond, Wayne D %A Post, Wendy %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Zhang, Xiaoling %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Saba, Yasaman %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Seldenrijk, Adrie %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Hamsten, Anders %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Lawlor, Deborah A %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Bowden, Donald W %A Schmidt, Helena %A Wilson, James F %A Wilson, James G %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Deanfield, John %A Halcox, Julian %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Loeffler, Markus %A Evans, Michele K %A Debette, Stephanie %A Humphries, Steve E %A Völker, Uwe %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Björkegren, Johan L M %A Casas, Juan P %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %K ADAMTS9 Protein %K Amino Acid Oxidoreductases %K Carotid Intima-Media Thickness %K Coronary Disease %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Lod Score %K Plaque, Atherosclerotic %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Risk Factors %X

Carotid artery intima media thickness (cIMT) and carotid plaque are measures of subclinical atherosclerosis associated with ischemic stroke and coronary heart disease (CHD). Here, we undertake meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in 71,128 individuals for cIMT, and 48,434 individuals for carotid plaque traits. We identify eight novel susceptibility loci for cIMT, one independent association at the previously-identified PINX1 locus, and one novel locus for carotid plaque. Colocalization analysis with nearby vascular expression quantitative loci (cis-eQTLs) derived from arterial wall and metabolic tissues obtained from patients with CHD identifies candidate genes at two potentially additional loci, ADAMTS9 and LOXL4. LD score regression reveals significant genetic correlations between cIMT and plaque traits, and both cIMT and plaque with CHD, any stroke subtype and ischemic stroke. Our study provides insights into genes and tissue-specific regulatory mechanisms linking atherosclerosis both to its functional genomic origins and its clinical consequences in humans.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 5141 %8 2018 12 03 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-07340-5 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Hum Genet %D 2018 %T A Large-Scale Multi-ancestry Genome-wide Study Accounting for Smoking Behavior Identifies Multiple Significant Loci for Blood Pressure. %A Sung, Yun J %A Winkler, Thomas W %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A Bentley, Amy R %A Brown, Michael R %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Schwander, Karen %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Franceschini, Nora %A Lu, Yingchang %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Sim, Xueling %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Marten, Jonathan %A Musani, Solomon K %A Li, Changwei %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Richard, Melissa A %A Noordam, Raymond %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Liu, Yongmei %A Manning, Alisa K %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Warren, Helen R %A Zhao, Wei %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Matoba, Nana %A Sofer, Tamar %A Alver, Maris %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Divers, Jasmin %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Gao, Chuan %A Giulianini, Franco %A Goel, Anuj %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hartwig, Fernando Pires %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kasturiratne, Anuradhani %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Leander, Karin %A Lee, Wen-Jane %A Lin, Keng-Hung %A 'an Luan, Jian %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meian, He %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Schupf, Nicole %A Scott, Robert A %A Sheu, Wayne H H %A Stančáková, Alena %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A van der Most, Peter J %A Varga, Tibor V %A Wang, Heming %A Wang, Yajuan %A Ware, Erin B %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Afaq, Saima %A Alfred, Tamuno %A Amin, Najaf %A Arking, Dan %A Aung, Tin %A Barr, R Graham %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Braund, Peter S %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Cabrera, Claudia P %A Cade, Brian %A Caizheng, Yu %A Campbell, Archie %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Christensen, Kaare %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Collins, Francis S %A Connell, John M %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Silva, H Janaka %A Debette, Stephanie %A Dörr, Marcus %A Duan, Qing %A Eaton, Charles B %A Ehret, Georg %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Faul, Jessica D %A Fisher, Virginia A %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gao, He %A Gigante, Bruna %A Graff, Misa %A Gu, C Charles %A Gu, Dongfeng %A Gupta, Preeti %A Hagenaars, Saskia P %A Harris, Tamara B %A He, Jiang %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hirata, Makoto %A Hofman, Albert %A Howard, Barbara V %A Hunt, Steven %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Jia, Yucheng %A Joehanes, Roby %A Justice, Anne E %A Katsuya, Tomohiro %A Kaufman, Joel %A Kerrison, Nicola D %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Koistinen, Heikki A %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lewis, Cora E %A Li, Yize %A Lim, Sing Hui %A Lin, Shiow %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liu, Jingmin %A Liu, Kiang %A Liu, Yeheng %A Loh, Marie %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Long, Jirong %A Louie, Tin %A Mägi, Reedik %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milani, Lili %A Momozawa, Yukihide %A Morris, Andrew P %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Munson, Peter %A Murray, Alison D %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nasri, Ubaydah %A Norris, Jill M %A North, Kari %A Ogunniyi, Adesola %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Palmas, Walter R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Pankow, James S %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Renstrom, Frida %A Rice, Treva K %A Ridker, Paul M %A Robino, Antonietta %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rudan, Igor %A Sabanayagam, Charumathi %A Salako, Babatunde L %A Sandow, Kevin %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Scott, William R %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Sever, Peter %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tang, Hua %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Tham, Yih Chung %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Lihua %A Wang, Ya X %A Wei, Wen Bin %A Williams, Christine %A Wilson, Gregory %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Yao, Jie %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bowden, Donald W %A Chambers, John C %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A de Faire, Ulf %A Deary, Ian J %A Esko, Tõnu %A Farrall, Martin %A Forrester, Terrence %A Franks, Paul W %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Horta, Bernardo Lessa %A Hung, Yi-Jen %A Jonas, Jost B %A Kato, Norihiro %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Laakso, Markku %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liang, Kae-Woei %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Newman, Anne B %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Redline, Susan %A Rettig, Rainer %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Scott, James %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Weir, David R %A Wickremasinghe, Ananda R %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zheng, Wei %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Bouchard, Claude %A Cooper, Richard S %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Levy, Daniel %A O'Connell, Jeff R %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Dam, Rob M %A Sims, Mario %A Arnett, Donna K %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Fox, Ervin R %A Hayward, Caroline %A Fornage, Myriam %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Province, Michael A %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Tai, E Shyong %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Reiner, Alex P %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Bierut, Laura J %A Gauderman, W James %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Elliott, Paul %A Rice, Kenneth %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Chasman, Daniel I %X

Genome-wide association analysis advanced understanding of blood pressure (BP), a major risk factor for vascular conditions such as coronary heart disease and stroke. Accounting for smoking behavior may help identify BP loci and extend our knowledge of its genetic architecture. We performed genome-wide association meta-analyses of systolic and diastolic BP incorporating gene-smoking interactions in 610,091 individuals. Stage 1 analysis examined ∼18.8 million SNPs and small insertion/deletion variants in 129,913 individuals from four ancestries (European, African, Asian, and Hispanic) with follow-up analysis of promising variants in 480,178 additional individuals from five ancestries. We identified 15 loci that were genome-wide significant (p < 5 × 10) in stage 1 and formally replicated in stage 2. A combined stage 1 and 2 meta-analysis identified 66 additional genome-wide significant loci (13, 35, and 18 loci in European, African, and trans-ancestry, respectively). A total of 56 known BP loci were also identified by our results (p < 5 × 10). Of the newly identified loci, ten showed significant interaction with smoking status, but none of them were replicated in stage 2. Several loci were identified in African ancestry, highlighting the importance of genetic studies in diverse populations. The identified loci show strong evidence for regulatory features and support shared pathophysiology with cardiometabolic and addiction traits. They also highlight a role in BP regulation for biological candidates such as modulators of vascular structure and function (CDKN1B, BCAR1-CFDP1, PXDN, EEA1), ciliopathies (SDCCAG8, RPGRIP1L), telomere maintenance (TNKS, PINX1, AKTIP), and central dopaminergic signaling (MSRA, EBF2).

%B Am J Hum Genet %V 102 %P 375-400 %8 2018 Mar 01 %G eng %N 3 %R 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.01.015 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T Large-scale whole-exome sequencing association studies identify rare functional variants influencing serum urate levels. %A Tin, Adrienne %A Li, Yong %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Nutile, Teresa %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Yang, Qiong %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Robinson-Cohen, Cassianne %A Mace, Aurelien %A Liu, Jun %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Sorice, Rossella %A Sedaghat, Sanaz %A Swen, Melody %A Yu, Bing %A Ghasemi, Sahar %A Teumer, Alexanda %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Ciullo, Marina %A Li, Meng %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kraaij, Robert %A Amin, Najaf %A van Rooij, Jeroen %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Dehghan, Abbas %A McKnight, Barbara %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Morrison, Alanna %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Fox, Caroline S %A Woodward, Owen M %A Köttgen, Anna %K Exome %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Glucose Transport Proteins, Facilitative %K Humans %K Kidney Function Tests %K Meta-Analysis as Topic %K Organic Anion Transporters %K Organic Cation Transport Proteins %K Protein Structure, Secondary %K Uric Acid %X

Elevated serum urate levels can cause gout, an excruciating disease with suboptimal treatment. Previous GWAS identified common variants with modest effects on serum urate. Here we report large-scale whole-exome sequencing association studies of serum urate and kidney function among ≤19,517 European ancestry and African-American individuals. We identify aggregate associations of low-frequency damaging variants in the urate transporters SLC22A12 (URAT1; p = 1.3 × 10) and SLC2A9 (p = 4.5 × 10). Gout risk in rare SLC22A12 variant carriers is halved (OR = 0.5, p = 4.9 × 10). Selected rare variants in SLC22A12 are validated in transport studies, confirming three as loss-of-function (R325W, R405C, and T467M) and illustrating the therapeutic potential of the new URAT1-blocker lesinurad. In SLC2A9, mapping of rare variants of large effects onto the predicted protein structure reveals new residues that may affect urate binding. These findings provide new insights into the genetic architecture of serum urate, and highlight molecular targets in SLC22A12 and SLC2A9 for lowering serum urate and preventing gout.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 4228 %8 2018 10 12 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-06620-4 %0 Journal Article %J Wellcome Open Res %D 2018 %T Meta-analysis of exome array data identifies six novel genetic loci for lung function. %A Jackson, Victoria E %A Latourelle, Jeanne C %A Wain, Louise V %A Smith, Albert V %A Grove, Megan L %A Bartz, Traci M %A Obeidat, Ma'en %A Province, Michael A %A Gao, Wei %A Qaiser, Beenish %A Porteous, David J %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Grarup, Niels %A Li, Jin %A Altmaier, Elisabeth %A Marten, Jonathan %A Harris, Sarah E %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Pottinger, Tess D %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Lind-Thomsen, Allan %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Lahousse, Lies %A Imboden, Medea %A Teumer, Alexander %A Prins, Bram %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Franceschini, Nora %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Bossé, Yohan %A Timens, Wim %A Kraja, Aldi %A Loukola, Anu %A Tang, Wenbo %A Liu, Yongmei %A Bork-Jensen, Jette %A Justesen, Johanne M %A Linneberg, Allan %A Lange, Leslie A %A Rawal, Rajesh %A Karrasch, Stefan %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Smith, Blair H %A Davies, Gail %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Bonten, Tobias N %A Enroth, Stefan %A Lind, Lars %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Kumar, Ashish %A Stubbe, Beate %A Kähönen, Mika %A Wyss, Annah B %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hao, Ke %A Rantanen, Taina %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Lohman, Kurt %A Skaaby, Tea %A Pisinger, Charlotta %A Hansen, Torben %A Schulz, Holger %A Polasek, Ozren %A Campbell, Archie %A Starr, John M %A Rich, Stephen S %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Johansson, Asa %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Weiss, Stefan %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A North, Kari E %A Gharib, Sina A %A Sin, Don D %A Taylor, Kent D %A O'Connor, George T %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Harris, Tamara B %A Pederson, Oluf %A Vestergaard, Henrik %A Wilson, James G %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Hayward, Caroline %A Kerr, Shona %A Deary, Ian J %A Barr, R Graham %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Morris, Andrew P %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole %A Gläser, Sven %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Strachan, David P %A Dupuis, Josée %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Hall, Ian P %A Tobin, Martin D %A London, Stephanie J %X

Over 90 regions of the genome have been associated with lung function to date, many of which have also been implicated in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. We carried out meta-analyses of exome array data and three lung function measures: forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV ), forced vital capacity (FVC) and the ratio of FEV to FVC (FEV /FVC). These analyses by the SpiroMeta and CHARGE consortia included 60,749 individuals of European ancestry from 23 studies, and 7,721 individuals of African Ancestry from 5 studies in the discovery stage, with follow-up in up to 111,556 independent individuals. We identified significant (P<2·8x10 ) associations with six SNPs: a nonsynonymous variant in , which is predicted to be damaging, three intronic SNPs ( and ) and two intergenic SNPs near to and Expression quantitative trait loci analyses found evidence for regulation of gene expression at three signals and implicated several genes, including and . Further interrogation of these loci could provide greater understanding of the determinants of lung function and pulmonary disease.

%B Wellcome Open Res %V 3 %P 4 %8 2018 %G eng %R 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.12583.3 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2018 %T Multiancestry association study identifies new asthma risk loci that colocalize with immune-cell enhancer marks. %A Demenais, Florence %A Margaritte-Jeannin, Patricia %A Barnes, Kathleen C %A Cookson, William O C %A Altmüller, Janine %A Ang, Wei %A Barr, R Graham %A Beaty, Terri H %A Becker, Allan B %A Beilby, John %A Bisgaard, Hans %A Bjornsdottir, Unnur Steina %A Bleecker, Eugene %A Bønnelykke, Klaus %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Bouzigon, Emmanuelle %A Brightling, Christopher E %A Brossard, Myriam %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Burchard, Esteban %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Bush, Andrew %A Chan-Yeung, Moira %A Chung, Kian Fan %A Couto Alves, Alexessander %A Curtin, John A %A Custovic, Adnan %A Daley, Denise %A de Jongste, Johan C %A Del-Rio-Navarro, Blanca E %A Donohue, Kathleen M %A Duijts, Liesbeth %A Eng, Celeste %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Farrall, Martin %A Fedorova, Yuliya %A Feenstra, Bjarke %A Ferreira, Manuel A %A Freidin, Maxim B %A Gajdos, Zofia %A Gauderman, Jim %A Gehring, Ulrike %A Geller, Frank %A Genuneit, Jon %A Gharib, Sina A %A Gilliland, Frank %A Granell, Raquel %A Graves, Penelope E %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Haahtela, Tari %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Heederik, Dick %A Heinrich, Joachim %A Heliövaara, Markku %A Henderson, John %A Himes, Blanca E %A Hirose, Hiroshi %A Hirschhorn, Joel N %A Hofman, Albert %A Holt, Patrick %A Hottenga, Jouke %A Hudson, Thomas J %A Hui, Jennie %A Imboden, Medea %A Ivanov, Vladimir %A Jaddoe, Vincent W V %A James, Alan %A Janson, Christer %A Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta %A Jarvis, Deborah %A Jones, Graham %A Jonsdottir, Ingileif %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Kabesch, Michael %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kantor, David B %A Karunas, Alexandra S %A Khusnutdinova, Elza %A Koppelman, Gerard H %A Kozyrskyj, Anita L %A Kreiner, Eskil %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kumar, Rajesh %A Kumar, Ashish %A Kuokkanen, Mikko %A Lahousse, Lies %A Laitinen, Tarja %A Laprise, Catherine %A Lathrop, Mark %A Lau, Susanne %A Lee, Young-Ae %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Letort, Sébastien %A Levin, Albert M %A Li, Guo %A Liang, Liming %A Loehr, Laura R %A London, Stephanie J %A Loth, Daan W %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Marenholz, Ingo %A Martinez, Fernando J %A Matheson, Melanie C %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Matsumoto, Kenji %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A McArdle, Wendy L %A Melbye, Mads %A Melén, Erik %A Meyers, Deborah %A Michel, Sven %A Mohamdi, Hamida %A Musk, Arthur W %A Myers, Rachel A %A Nieuwenhuis, Maartje A E %A Noguchi, Emiko %A O'Connor, George T %A Ogorodova, Ludmila M %A Palmer, Cameron D %A Palotie, Aarno %A Park, Julie E %A Pennell, Craig E %A Pershagen, Göran %A Polonikov, Alexey %A Postma, Dirkje S %A Probst-Hensch, Nicole %A Puzyrev, Valery P %A Raby, Benjamin A %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Ramasamy, Adaikalavan %A Rich, Stephen S %A Robertson, Colin F %A Romieu, Isabelle %A Salam, Muhammad T %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Schlünssen, Vivi %A Scott, Robert %A Selivanova, Polina A %A Sigsgaard, Torben %A Simpson, Angela %A Siroux, Valérie %A Smith, Lewis J %A Solodilova, Maria %A Standl, Marie %A Stefansson, Kari %A Strachan, David P %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Takahashi, Atsushi %A Thompson, Philip J %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tiesler, Carla M T %A Torgerson, Dara G %A Tsunoda, Tatsuhiko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van der Valk, Ralf J P %A Vaysse, Amaury %A Vedantam, Sailaja %A von Berg, Andrea %A von Mutius, Erika %A Vonk, Judith M %A Waage, Johannes %A Wareham, Nick J %A Weiss, Scott T %A White, Wendy B %A Wickman, Magnus %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Williams, L Keoki %A Wouters, Inge M %A Yang, James J %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Moffatt, Miriam F %A Ober, Carole %A Nicolae, Dan L %X

We examined common variation in asthma risk by conducting a meta-analysis of worldwide asthma genome-wide association studies (23,948 asthma cases, 118,538 controls) of individuals from ethnically diverse populations. We identified five new asthma loci, found two new associations at two known asthma loci, established asthma associations at two loci previously implicated in the comorbidity of asthma plus hay fever, and confirmed nine known loci. Investigation of pleiotropy showed large overlaps in genetic variants with autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. The enrichment in enhancer marks at asthma risk loci, especially in immune cells, suggested a major role of these loci in the regulation of immunologically related mechanisms.

%B Nat Genet %V 50 %P 42-53 %8 2018 Jan %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41588-017-0014-7 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2018 %T Multiancestry genome-wide association study of 520,000 subjects identifies 32 loci associated with stroke and stroke subtypes. %A Malik, Rainer %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Traylor, Matthew %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Okada, Yukinori %A Mishra, Aniket %A Rutten-Jacobs, Loes %A Giese, Anne-Katrin %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Gretarsdottir, Solveig %A Anderson, Christopher D %A Chong, Michael %A Adams, Hieab H H %A Ago, Tetsuro %A Almgren, Peter %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Ay, Hakan %A Bartz, Traci M %A Benavente, Oscar R %A Bevan, Steve %A Boncoraglio, Giorgio B %A Brown, Robert D %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Carrera, Caty %A Carty, Cara L %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chen, Wei-Min %A Cole, John W %A Correa, Adolfo %A Cotlarciuc, Ioana %A Cruchaga, Carlos %A Danesh, John %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A DeStefano, Anita L %A den Hoed, Marcel %A Duan, Qing %A Engelter, Stefan T %A Falcone, Guido J %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Grewal, Raji P %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Haessler, Jeffrey %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hassan, Ahamad %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Howard, George %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Hyacinth, Hyacinth I %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Jimenez-Conde, Jordi %A Johnson, Julie A %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kanai, Masahiro %A Keene, Keith L %A Kissela, Brett M %A Kleindorfer, Dawn O %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Lange, Leslie A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lee, Jin-Moo %A Lemmens, Robin %A Leys, Didier %A Lewis, Cathryn M %A Lin, Wei-Yu %A Lindgren, Arne G %A Lorentzen, Erik %A Magnusson, Patrik K %A Maguire, Jane %A Manichaikul, Ani %A McArdle, Patrick F %A Meschia, James F %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Nalls, Michael A %A Ninomiya, Toshiharu %A O'Donnell, Martin J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Pulit, Sara L %A Rannikmae, Kristiina %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Rexrode, Kathryn M %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rost, Natalia S %A Rothwell, Peter M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rundek, Tatjana %A Sacco, Ralph L %A Sakaue, Saori %A Sale, Michèle M %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sapkota, Bishwa R %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schminke, Ulf %A Sharma, Pankaj %A Slowik, Agnieszka %A Sudlow, Cathie L M %A Tanislav, Christian %A Tatlisumak, Turgut %A Taylor, Kent D %A Thijs, Vincent N S %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tiedt, Steffen %A Trompet, Stella %A Tzourio, Christophe %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Walters, Matthew %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wassertheil-Smoller, Sylvia %A Wilson, James G %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Yang, Qiong %A Yusuf, Salim %A Bis, Joshua C %A Pastinen, Tomi %A Ruusalepp, Arno %A Schadt, Eric E %A Koplev, Simon %A Björkegren, Johan L M %A Codoni, Veronica %A Civelek, Mete %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Trégouët, David A %A Christophersen, Ingrid E %A Roselli, Carolina %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Tai, E Shyong %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kato, Norihiro %A He, Jiang %A van der Harst, Pim %A Elliott, Paul %A Chambers, John C %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Sanghera, Dharambir K %A Melander, Olle %A Jern, Christina %A Strbian, Daniel %A Fernandez-Cadenas, Israel %A Longstreth, W T %A Rolfs, Arndt %A Hata, Jun %A Woo, Daniel %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Paré, Guillaume %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Saleheen, Danish %A Stefansson, Kari %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Kittner, Steven J %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Fornage, Myriam %A Markus, Hugh S %A Howson, Joanna M M %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Debette, Stephanie %A Dichgans, Martin %A Malik, Rainer %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Traylor, Matthew %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Okada, Yukinori %A Mishra, Aniket %A Rutten-Jacobs, Loes %A Giese, Anne-Katrin %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Gretarsdottir, Solveig %A Anderson, Christopher D %A Chong, Michael %A Adams, Hieab H H %A Ago, Tetsuro %A Almgren, Peter %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Ay, Hakan %A Bartz, Traci M %A Benavente, Oscar R %A Bevan, Steve %A Boncoraglio, Giorgio B %A Brown, Robert D %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Carrera, Caty %A Carty, Cara L %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chen, Wei-Min %A Cole, John W %A Correa, Adolfo %A Cotlarciuc, Ioana %A Cruchaga, Carlos %A Danesh, John %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Hoed, Marcel den %A Duan, Qing %A Engelter, Stefan T %A Falcone, Guido J %A Gottesman, Rebecca F %A Grewal, Raji P %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Haessler, Jeffrey %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hassan, Ahamad %A Havulinna, Aki S %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Howard, George %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Hyacinth, Hyacinth I %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Jimenez-Conde, Jordi %A Johnson, Julie A %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kanai, Masahiro %A Keene, Keith L %A Kissela, Brett M %A Kleindorfer, Dawn O %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Lange, Leslie A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lee, Jin-Moo %A Lemmens, Robin %A Leys, Didier %A Lewis, Cathryn M %A Lin, Wei-Yu %A Lindgren, Arne G %A Lorentzen, Erik %A Magnusson, Patrik K %A Maguire, Jane %A Manichaikul, Ani %A McArdle, Patrick F %A Meschia, James F %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Nalls, Michael A %A Ninomiya, Toshiharu %A O'Donnell, Martin J %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Pulit, Sara L %A Rannikmae, Kristiina %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Rexrode, Kathryn M %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rost, Natalia S %A Rothwell, Peter M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rundek, Tatjana %A Sacco, Ralph L %A Sakaue, Saori %A Sale, Michèle M %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sapkota, Bishwa R %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schminke, Ulf %A Sharma, Pankaj %A Slowik, Agnieszka %A Sudlow, Cathie L M %A Tanislav, Christian %A Tatlisumak, Turgut %A Taylor, Kent D %A Thijs, Vincent N S %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tiedt, Steffen %A Trompet, Stella %A Tzourio, Christophe %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Walters, Matthew %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wassertheil-Smoller, Sylvia %A Wilson, James G %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Yang, Qiong %A Yusuf, Salim %A Amin, Najaf %A Aparicio, Hugo S %A Arnett, Donna K %A Attia, John %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Berr, Claudine %A Buring, Julie E %A Bustamante, Mariana %A Caso, Valeria %A Cheng, Yu-Ching %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Chowhan, Ayesha %A Cullell, Natalia %A Dartigues, Jean-François %A Delavaran, Hossein %A Delgado, Pilar %A Dörr, Marcus %A Engström, Gunnar %A Ford, Ian %A Gurpreet, Wander S %A Hamsten, Anders %A Heitsch, Laura %A Hozawa, Atsushi %A Ibanez, Laura %A Ilinca, Andreea %A Ingelsson, Martin %A Iwasaki, Motoki %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A Jood, Katarina %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Kaffashian, Sara %A Kalra, Lalit %A Kamouchi, Masahiro %A Kitazono, Takanari %A Kjartansson, Olafur %A Kloss, Manja %A Koudstaal, Peter J %A Krupinski, Jerzy %A Labovitz, Daniel L %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Levi, Christopher R %A Li, Linxin %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Lioutas, Vasileios %A Liu, Yong Mei %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Makoto, Hirata %A Martinez-Majander, Nicolas %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Minegishi, Naoko %A Montaner, Joan %A Morris, Andrew P %A Muiño, Elena %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Norrving, Bo %A Ogishima, Soichi %A Parati, Eugenio A %A Peddareddygari, Leema Reddy %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Pera, Joanna %A Perola, Markus %A Pezzini, Alessandro %A Pileggi, Silvana %A Rabionet, Raquel %A Riba-Llena, Iolanda %A Ribasés, Marta %A Romero, Jose R %A Roquer, Jaume %A Rudd, Anthony G %A Sarin, Antti-Pekka %A Sarju, Ralhan %A Sarnowski, Chloe %A Sasaki, Makoto %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Satoh, Mamoru %A Sattar, Naveed %A Sawada, Norie %A Sibolt, Gerli %A Sigurdsson, Ásgeir %A Smith, Albert %A Sobue, Kenji %A Soriano-Tárraga, Carolina %A Stanne, Tara %A Stine, O Colin %A Stott, David J %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Takai, Takako %A Tanaka, Hideo %A Tanno, Kozo %A Teumer, Alexander %A Tomppo, Liisa %A Torres-Aguila, Nuria P %A Touze, Emmanuel %A Tsugane, Shoichiro %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Valdimarsson, Einar M %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Völzke, Henry %A Wakai, Kenji %A Weir, David %A Williams, Stephen R %A Wolfe, Charles D A %A Wong, Quenna %A Xu, Huichun %A Yamaji, Taiki %A Sanghera, Dharambir K %A Melander, Olle %A Jern, Christina %A Strbian, Daniel %A Fernandez-Cadenas, Israel %A Longstreth, W T %A Rolfs, Arndt %A Hata, Jun %A Woo, Daniel %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Paré, Guillaume %A Hopewell, Jemma C %A Saleheen, Danish %A Stefansson, Kari %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Kittner, Steven J %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Fornage, Myriam %A Markus, Hugh S %A Howson, Joanna M M %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Debette, Stephanie %A Dichgans, Martin %X

Stroke has multiple etiologies, but the underlying genes and pathways are largely unknown. We conducted a multiancestry genome-wide-association meta-analysis in 521,612 individuals (67,162 cases and 454,450 controls) and discovered 22 new stroke risk loci, bringing the total to 32. We further found shared genetic variation with related vascular traits, including blood pressure, cardiac traits, and venous thromboembolism, at individual loci (n = 18), and using genetic risk scores and linkage-disequilibrium-score regression. Several loci exhibited distinct association and pleiotropy patterns for etiological stroke subtypes. Eleven new susceptibility loci indicate mechanisms not previously implicated in stroke pathophysiology, with prioritization of risk variants and genes accomplished through bioinformatics analyses using extensive functional datasets. Stroke risk loci were significantly enriched in drug targets for antithrombotic therapy.

%B Nat Genet %V 50 %P 524-537 %8 2018 Apr %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1038/s41588-018-0058-3 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2018 %T Multi-ethnic genome-wide association study for atrial fibrillation. %A Roselli, Carolina %A Chaffin, Mark D %A Weng, Lu-Chen %A Aeschbacher, Stefanie %A Ahlberg, Gustav %A Albert, Christine M %A Almgren, Peter %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Anderson, Christopher D %A Aragam, Krishna G %A Arking, Dan E %A Barnard, John %A Bartz, Traci M %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Bihlmeyer, Nathan A %A Bis, Joshua C %A Bloom, Heather L %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bottinger, Erwin B %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Calkins, Hugh %A Campbell, Archie %A Cappola, Thomas P %A Carlquist, John %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Chen, Lin Y %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Choi, Eue-Keun %A Choi, Seung Hoan %A Christophersen, Ingrid E %A Chung, Mina K %A Cole, John W %A Conen, David %A Cook, James %A Crijns, Harry J %A Cutler, Michael J %A Damrauer, Scott M %A Daniels, Brian R %A Darbar, Dawood %A Delgado, Graciela %A Denny, Joshua C %A Dichgans, Martin %A Dörr, Marcus %A Dudink, Elton A %A Dudley, Samuel C %A Esa, Nada %A Esko, Tõnu %A Eskola, Markku %A Fatkin, Diane %A Felix, Stephan B %A Ford, Ian %A Franco, Oscar H %A Geelhoed, Bastiaan %A Grewal, Raji P %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Gupta, Namrata %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Gutmann, Rebecca %A Hamsten, Anders %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hernesniemi, Jussi %A Hocking, Lynne J %A Hofman, Albert %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Huang, Jie %A Huang, Paul L %A Huffman, Jennifer %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Ipek, Esra Gucuk %A Ito, Kaoru %A Jimenez-Conde, Jordi %A Johnson, Renee %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kääb, Stefan %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kane, John P %A Kastrati, Adnan %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Katschnig-Winter, Petra %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Kessler, Thorsten %A Kietselaer, Bas L %A Kirchhof, Paulus %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Knight, Stacey %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Launer, Lenore J %A Laurikka, Jari %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Leineweber, Kirsten %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Li, Man %A Lim, Hong Euy %A Lin, Henry J %A Lin, Honghuang %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Lokki, Marja-Liisa %A London, Barry %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Low, Siew-Kee %A Lu, Yingchang %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Magnusson, Patrik K %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Malik, Rainer %A Mansur, Alfredo J %A Marcus, Gregory M %A Margolin, Lauren %A Margulies, Kenneth B %A März, Winfried %A McManus, David D %A Melander, Olle %A Mohanty, Sanghamitra %A Montgomery, Jay A %A Morley, Michael P %A Morris, Andrew P %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Natale, Andrea %A Nazarian, Saman %A Neumann, Benjamin %A Newton-Cheh, Christopher %A Niemeijer, Maartje N %A Nikus, Kjell %A Nilsson, Peter %A Noordam, Raymond %A Oellers, Heidi %A Olesen, Morten S %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Pak, Hui-Nam %A Paré, Guillaume %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Pera, Joanna %A Pereira, Alexandre %A Porteous, David %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Pulit, Sara L %A Pullinger, Clive R %A Rader, Daniel J %A Refsgaard, Lena %A Ribasés, Marta %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rienstra, Michiel %A Risch, Lorenz %A Roden, Dan M %A Rosand, Jonathan %A Rosenberg, Michael A %A Rost, Natalia %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Saba, Samir %A Sandhu, Roopinder K %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Schramm, Katharina %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Schurman, Claudia %A Scott, Stuart A %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A Shaffer, Christian %A Shah, Svati %A Shalaby, Alaa A %A Shim, Jaemin %A Shoemaker, M Benjamin %A Siland, Joylene E %A Sinisalo, Juha %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Slowik, Agnieszka %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Blair H %A Smith, J Gustav %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Stricker, Bruno H %A Sun, Albert %A Sun, Han %A Svendsen, Jesper H %A Tanaka, Toshihiro %A Tanriverdi, Kahraman %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teder-Laving, Maris %A Teumer, Alexander %A Thériault, Sébastien %A Trompet, Stella %A Tucker, Nathan R %A Tveit, Arnljot %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van der Harst, Pim %A Van Gelder, Isabelle C %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Verweij, Niek %A Vlachopoulou, Efthymia %A Völker, Uwe %A Wang, Biqi %A Weeke, Peter E %A Weijs, Bob %A Weiss, Raul %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wells, Quinn S %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Wong, Jorge A %A Woo, Daniel %A Worrall, Bradford B %A Yang, Pil-Sung %A Yao, Jie %A Yoneda, Zachary T %A Zeller, Tanja %A Zeng, Lingyao %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Ellinor, Patrick T %X

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.

%B Nat Genet %V 50 %P 1225-1233 %8 2018 Sep %G eng %N 9 %R 10.1038/s41588-018-0133-9 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T Multiethnic meta-analysis identifies ancestry-specific and cross-ancestry loci for pulmonary function. %A Wyss, Annah B %A Sofer, Tamar %A Lee, Mi Kyeong %A Terzikhan, Natalie %A Nguyen, Jennifer N %A Lahousse, Lies %A Latourelle, Jeanne C %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Bartz, Traci M %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Gao, Wei %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Tang, Wenbo %A Oldmeadow, Christopher %A Duan, Qing %A de Jong, Kim %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Wang, Xin-Qun %A Noordam, Raymond %A Hartwig, Fernando Pires %A Jackson, Victoria E %A Wang, Tianyuan %A Obeidat, Ma'en %A Hobbs, Brian D %A Huan, Tianxiao %A Gui, Hongsheng %A Parker, Margaret M %A Hu, Donglei %A Mogil, Lauren S %A Kichaev, Gleb %A Jin, Jianping %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Harris, Tamara B %A Kalhan, Ravi %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Paternoster, Lavinia %A Burkart, Kristin M %A Liu, Yongmei %A Holliday, Elizabeth G %A Wilson, James G %A Vonk, Judith M %A Sanders, Jason L %A Barr, R Graham %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Menezes, Ana Maria Baptista %A Adams, Hieab H H %A van den Berge, Maarten %A Joehanes, Roby %A Levin, Albert M %A Liberto, Jennifer %A Launer, Lenore J %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Celedón, Juan C %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Scott, Rodney J %A Christensen, Kaare %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Bonten, Tobias N %A Wehrmeister, Fernando César %A Bossé, Yohan %A Xiao, Shujie %A Oh, Sam %A Franceschini, Nora %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Lohman, Kurt %A McEvoy, Mark %A Province, Michael A %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Taylor, Kent D %A Nickle, David C %A Williams, L Keoki %A Burchard, Esteban G %A Wheeler, Heather E %A Sin, Don D %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A North, Kari E %A Fornage, Myriam %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Myers, Richard H %A O'Connor, George %A Hansen, Torben %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Sung, Joohon %A Kim, Woo Jin %A Attia, John R %A Lange, Leslie %A Boezen, H Marike %A Thyagarajan, Bharat %A Rich, Stephen S %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Horta, Bernardo Lessa %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Im, Hae Kyung %A Cho, Michael H %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Gharib, Sina A %A Dupuis, Josée %A Manichaikul, Ani %A London, Stephanie J %X

Nearly 100 loci have been identified for pulmonary function, almost exclusively in studies of European ancestry populations. We extend previous research by meta-analyzing genome-wide association studies of 1000 Genomes imputed variants in relation to pulmonary function in a multiethnic population of 90,715 individuals of European (N = 60,552), African (N = 8429), Asian (N = 9959), and Hispanic/Latino (N = 11,775) ethnicities. We identify over 50 additional loci at genome-wide significance in ancestry-specific or multiethnic meta-analyses. Using recent fine-mapping methods incorporating functional annotation, gene expression, and differences in linkage disequilibrium between ethnicities, we further shed light on potential causal variants and genes at known and newly identified loci. Several of the novel genes encode proteins with predicted or established drug targets, including KCNK2 and CDK12. Our study highlights the utility of multiethnic and integrative genomics approaches to extend existing knowledge of the genetics of lung function and clinical relevance of implicated loci.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 2976 %8 2018 Jul 30 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-05369-0 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2018 %T Novel genetic associations for blood pressure identified via gene-alcohol interaction in up to 570K individuals across multiple ancestries. %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Sung, Yun J %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Franceschini, Nora %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Sim, Xueling %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Marten, Jonathan %A Musani, Solomon K %A Li, Changwei %A Bentley, Amy R %A Brown, Michael R %A Schwander, Karen %A Richard, Melissa A %A Noordam, Raymond %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Fisher, Virginia %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Manning, Alisa K %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Smith, Albert V %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Alver, Maris %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Cai, Qiuyin %A Campbell, Archie %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Divers, Jasmin %A Gao, Chuan %A Goel, Anuj %A Hagemeijer, Yanick %A Harris, Sarah E %A He, Meian %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kasturiratne, Anuradhani %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Laguzzi, Federica %A Luan, Jian'an %A Matoba, Nana %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Rueedi, Rico %A Robino, Antonietta %A Said, M Abdullah %A Scott, Robert A %A Sofer, Tamar %A Stančáková, Alena %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A van der Most, Peter J %A Varga, Tibor V %A Vitart, Veronique %A Wang, Yajuan %A Ware, Erin B %A Warren, Helen R %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Afaq, Saima %A Amin, Najaf %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Arking, Dan E %A Aung, Tin %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Borecki, Ingrid %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Brown, Morris %A Brumat, Marco %A Burke, Gregory L %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Charumathi, Sabanayagam %A Ida Chen, Yii-Der %A Connell, John M %A Correa, Adolfo %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Silva, H Janaka %A Deng, Xuan %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Duan, Qing %A Eaton, Charles B %A Ehret, Georg %A Eppinga, Ruben N %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Faul, Jessica D %A Felix, Stephan B %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Forrester, Terrence %A Franco, Oscar H %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Gao, He %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Gigante, Bruna %A Gu, C Charles %A Gu, Dongfeng %A Hagenaars, Saskia P %A Hallmans, Göran %A Harris, Tamara B %A He, Jiang %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hirata, Makoto %A Howard, Barbara V %A Ikram, M Arfan %A John, Ulrich %A Katsuya, Tomohiro %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Lakka, Timo A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lewis, Cora E %A Li, Yize %A Lin, Shiow %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liu, Jingmin %A Loh, Marie %A Louie, Tin %A Mägi, Reedik %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Milani, Lili %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Momozawa, Yukihide %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Norris, Jill M %A O'Connell, Jeff R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Perls, Thomas %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Poulter, Neil %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Roll, Kathryn %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Schupf, Nicole %A Scott, William R %A Sever, Peter S %A Shi, Yuan %A Sidney, Stephen %A Sims, Mario %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Stringham, Heather M %A Tan, Nicholas Y Q %A Tang, Hua %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Tham, Yih Chung %A Turner, Stephen T %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Lihua %A Wang, Ya Xing %A Wei, Wen Bin %A Williams, Christine %A Yao, Jie %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhao, Wei %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bowden, Donald W %A Chambers, John C %A Deary, Ian J %A Esko, Tõnu %A Farrall, Martin %A Franks, Paul W %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Jonas, Jost Bruno %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kato, Norihiro %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Laakso, Markku %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Leander, Karin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Study, Lifelines Cohort %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Polasek, Ozren %A Porteous, David J %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Scott, James %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Weir, David R %A Wickremasinghe, Ananda R %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zheng, Wei %A Bouchard, Claude %A Christensen, Kaare %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Liu, Yongmei %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A van Dam, Rob M %A Gauderman, W James %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Fornage, Myriam %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Fox, Ervin R %A Hayward, Caroline %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Tai, E Shyong %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Palmas, Walter %A Rice, Kenneth %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Elliott, Paul %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Province, Michael A %A Levy, Daniel %X

Heavy alcohol consumption is an established risk factor for hypertension; the mechanism by which alcohol consumption impact blood pressure (BP) regulation remains unknown. We hypothesized that a genome-wide association study accounting for gene-alcohol consumption interaction for BP might identify additional BP loci and contribute to the understanding of alcohol-related BP regulation. We conducted a large two-stage investigation incorporating joint testing of main genetic effects and single nucleotide variant (SNV)-alcohol consumption interactions. In Stage 1, genome-wide discovery meta-analyses in ≈131K individuals across several ancestry groups yielded 3,514 SNVs (245 loci) with suggestive evidence of association (P < 1.0 x 10-5). In Stage 2, these SNVs were tested for independent external replication in ≈440K individuals across multiple ancestries. We identified and replicated (at Bonferroni correction threshold) five novel BP loci (380 SNVs in 21 genes) and 49 previously reported BP loci (2,159 SNVs in 109 genes) in European ancestry, and in multi-ancestry meta-analyses (P < 5.0 x 10-8). For African ancestry samples, we detected 18 potentially novel BP loci (P < 5.0 x 10-8) in Stage 1 that warrant further replication. Additionally, correlated meta-analysis identified eight novel BP loci (11 genes). Several genes in these loci (e.g., PINX1, GATA4, BLK, FTO and GABBR2) have been previously reported to be associated with alcohol consumption. These findings provide insights into the role of alcohol consumption in the genetic architecture of hypertension.

%B PLoS One %V 13 %P e0198166 %8 2018 %G eng %N 6 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0198166 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Respir Crit Care Med %D 2018 %T Omega-3 Fatty Acids and Genome-wide Interaction Analyses Reveal DPP10-Pulmonary Function Association. %A Xu, Jiayi %A Gaddis, Nathan C %A Bartz, Traci M %A Hou, Ruixue %A Manichaikul, Ani W %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Smith, Albert V %A Sun, Fangui %A Terzikhan, Natalie %A Markunas, Christina A %A Patchen, Bonnie K %A Schu, Matthew %A Beydoun, May A %A Brusselle, Guy G %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Zhou, Xia %A Wood, Alexis C %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Harris, Tamara B %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jacobs, David R %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A O'Connor, George %A Oelsner, Elizabeth C %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ramachandran, Vasan S %A Rohde, Rebecca R %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Smith, Lewis J %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Voruganti, V Saroja %A Xu, Hanfei %A Zilhão, Nuno R %A Fornage, Myriam %A Zillikens, M Carola %A London, Stephanie J %A Barr, R Graham %A Dupuis, Josée %A Gharib, Sina A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Lahousse, Lies %A North, Kari E %A Steffen, Lyn M %A Cassano, Patricia A %A Hancock, Dana B %X

RATIONALE: Omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFAs) have anti-inflammatory properties that could benefit adults with comprised pulmonary health.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate n-3 PUFA associations with spirometric measures of pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and determine underlying genetic susceptibility.

METHODS: Associations of n-3 PUFA biomarkers (alpha-linolenic acid, eicosapentaenoic acid, docosapentaenoic acid [DPA], and docosahexaenoic acid [DHA]) were evaluated with PFTs (forced expiratory volume in the first second [FEV], forced vital capacity [FVC], and [FEV/FVC]) in meta-analyses across seven cohorts from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology Consortium (N=16,134 of European or African ancestry). PFT-associated n-3 PUFAs were carried forward to genome-wide interaction analyses in the four largest cohorts (N=11,962) and replicated in one cohort (N=1,687). Cohort-specific results were combined using joint 2 degree-of-freedom (2df) meta-analyses of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations and their interactions with n-3 PUFAs.

RESULTS: DPA and DHA were positively associated with FEV1 and FVC (P<0.025), with evidence for effect modification by smoking and by sex. Genome-wide analyses identified a novel association of rs11693320-an intronic DPP10 SNP-with FVC when incorporating an interaction with DHA, and the finding was replicated (P=9.4×10 across discovery and replication cohorts). The rs11693320-A allele (frequency~80%) was associated with lower FVC (P=2.1×10; β= -161.0mL), and the association was attenuated by higher DHA levels (P=2.1×10; β=36.2mL).

CONCLUSIONS: We corroborated beneficial effects of n-3 PUFAs on pulmonary function. By modeling genome-wide n-3 PUFA interactions, we identified a novel DPP10 SNP association with FVC that was not detectable in much larger studies ignoring this interaction.

%B Am J Respir Crit Care Med %8 2018 Sep 10 %G eng %R 10.1164/rccm.201802-0304OC %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2018 %T PR interval genome-wide association meta-analysis identifies 50 loci associated with atrial and atrioventricular electrical activity. %A van Setten, Jessica %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Jamshidi, Yalda %A Swenson, Brenton R %A Butler, Anne M %A Campbell, Harry %A Del Greco, Fabiola M %A Evans, Daniel S %A Gibson, Quince %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Kerr, Kathleen F %A Krijthe, Bouwe P %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Müller, Christian %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Ritchie, Marylyn D %A Robino, Antonietta %A Smith, Albert V %A Steri, Maristella %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Teumer, Alexander %A Trompet, Stella %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Verweij, Niek %A Yin, Xiaoyan %A Arnar, David O %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Bader, Joel S %A Barnard, John %A Bis, Josh %A Blankenberg, Stefan %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bradford, Yuki %A Buckley, Brendan M %A Chung, Mina K %A Crawford, Dana %A den Hoed, Marcel %A Denny, Josh C %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Ehret, Georg B %A Eijgelsheim, Mark %A Ellinor, Patrick T %A Felix, Stephan B %A Franco, Oscar H %A Franke, Lude %A Harris, Tamara B %A Holm, Hilma %A Ilaria, Gandin %A Iorio, Annamaria %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kors, Jan A %A Lakatta, Edward G %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lin, Honghuang %A Lin, Henry J %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lubitz, Steven A %A Macfarlane, Peter W %A Magnani, Jared W %A Leach, Irene Mateo %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Münzel, Thomas %A Papanicolaou, George J %A Peters, Annette %A Pfeufer, Arne %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Schlessinger, David %A Silva Aldana, Claudia T %A Sinner, Moritz F %A Smith, Jonathan D %A Snieder, Harold %A Soliman, Elsayed Z %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stott, David J %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tarasov, Kirill V %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Van Wagoner, David R %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Jan Westra, Harm %A Wild, Philipp S %A Zeller, Tanja %A Alonso, Alvaro %A Avery, Christy L %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Benjamin, Emelia J %A Cucca, Francesco %A Dörr, Marcus %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hayward, Caroline %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Kääb, Stefan %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liu, Yongmei %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Parsa, Afshin %A Polasek, Ozren %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Roden, Dan M %A Schnabel, Renate B %A Sinagra, Gianfranco %A Stefansson, Kari %A Stricker, Bruno H %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wilson, James F %A Gharib, Sina A %A de Bakker, Paul I W %A Isaacs, Aaron %A Arking, Dan E %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %X

Electrocardiographic PR interval measures atrio-ventricular depolarization and conduction, and abnormal PR interval is a risk factor for atrial fibrillation and heart block. Our genome-wide association study of over 92,000 European-descent individuals identifies 44 PR interval loci (34 novel). Examination of these loci reveals known and previously not-yet-reported biological processes involved in cardiac atrial electrical activity. Genes in these loci are over-represented in cardiac disease processes including heart block and atrial fibrillation. Variants in over half of the 44 loci were associated with atrial or blood transcript expression levels, or were in high linkage disequilibrium with missense variants. Six additional loci were identified either by meta-analysis of ~105,000 African and European-descent individuals and/or by pleiotropic analyses combining PR interval with heart rate, QRS interval, and atrial fibrillation. These findings implicate developmental pathways, and identify transcription factors, ion-channel genes, and cell-junction/cell-signaling proteins in atrio-ventricular conduction, identifying potential targets for drug development.

%B Nat Commun %V 9 %P 2904 %8 2018 Jul 25 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-04766-9 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2018 %T Refining the accuracy of validated target identification through coding variant fine-mapping in type 2 diabetes. %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Wessel, Jennifer %A Willems, Sara M %A Zhao, Wei %A Robertson, Neil R %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Gan, Wei %A Kitajima, Hidetoshi %A Taliun, Daniel %A Rayner, N William %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Lu, Yingchang %A Li, Man %A Jensen, Richard A %A Hu, Yao %A Huo, Shaofeng %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Zhang, Weihua %A Cook, James P %A Prins, Bram Peter %A Flannick, Jason %A Grarup, Niels %A Trubetskoy, Vassily Vladimirovich %A Kravic, Jasmina %A Kim, Young Jin %A Rybin, Denis V %A Yaghootkar, Hanieh %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Meidtner, Karina %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Varga, Tibor V %A Marten, Jonathan %A Li, Jin %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A An, Ping %A Ligthart, Symen %A Gustafsson, Stefan %A Malerba, Giovanni %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Tajes, Juan Fernandez %A Steinthorsdottir, Valgerdur %A Wuttke, Matthias %A Lecoeur, Cécile %A Preuss, Michael %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Graff, Marielisa %A Highland, Heather M %A Justice, Anne E %A Liu, Dajiang J %A Marouli, Eirini %A Peloso, Gina Marie %A Warren, Helen R %A Afaq, Saima %A Afzal, Shoaib %A Ahlqvist, Emma %A Almgren, Peter %A Amin, Najaf %A Bang, Lia B %A Bertoni, Alain G %A Bombieri, Cristina %A Bork-Jensen, Jette %A Brandslund, Ivan %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Burtt, Noel P %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Cho, Yoon Shin %A Christensen, Cramer %A Eastwood, Sophie V %A Eckardt, Kai-Uwe %A Fischer, Krista %A Gambaro, Giovanni %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Grove, Megan L %A de Haan, Hugoline G %A Hackinger, Sophie %A Hai, Yang %A Han, Sohee %A Tybjærg-Hansen, Anne %A Hivert, Marie-France %A Isomaa, Bo %A Jäger, Susanne %A Jørgensen, Marit E %A Jørgensen, Torben %A Käräjämäki, AnneMari %A Kim, Bong-Jo %A Kim, Sung Soo %A Koistinen, Heikki A %A Kovacs, Peter %A Kriebel, Jennifer %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Läll, Kristi %A Lange, Leslie A %A Lee, Jung-Jin %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Li, Huaixing %A Lin, Keng-Hung %A Linneberg, Allan %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Jun %A Loh, Marie %A Mägi, Reedik %A Mamakou, Vasiliki %A McKean-Cowdin, Roberta %A Nadkarni, Girish %A Neville, Matt %A Nielsen, Sune F %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Rathmann, Wolfgang %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rich, Stephen S %A Rode, Line %A Rolandsson, Olov %A Schönherr, Sebastian %A Selvin, Elizabeth %A Small, Kerrin S %A Stančáková, Alena %A Surendran, Praveen %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teslovich, Tanya M %A Thorand, Barbara %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Tin, Adrienne %A Tönjes, Anke %A Varbo, Anette %A Witte, Daniel R %A Wood, Andrew R %A Yajnik, Pranav %A Yao, Jie %A Yengo, Loic %A Young, Robin %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Boeing, Heiner %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Chowdhury, Rajiv %A Collins, Francis S %A Dedoussis, George %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Deloukas, Panos %A Ferrario, Marco M %A Ferrieres, Jean %A Florez, Jose C %A Frossard, Philippe %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heckbert, Susan R %A Howson, Joanna M M %A Ingelsson, Martin %A Kathiresan, Sekar %A Kee, Frank %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Männistö, Satu %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Melander, Olle %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Moitry, Marie %A Morris, Andrew D %A Murray, Alison D %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Owen, Katharine R %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Annette %A Province, Michael A %A Rasheed, Asif %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadineira, Fernando %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Rosengren, Anders H %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Sladek, Rob %A Smith, Blair H %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Varma, Rohit %A Willer, Cristen J %A Blüher, Matthias %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Chambers, John Campbell %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Danesh, John %A van Duijn, Cornelia %A Dupuis, Josée %A Franco, Oscar H %A Franks, Paul W %A Froguel, Philippe %A Grallert, Harald %A Groop, Leif %A Han, Bok-Ghee %A Hansen, Torben %A Hattersley, Andrew T %A Hayward, Caroline %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Kooner, Jaspal Singh %A Köttgen, Anna %A Kuulasmaa, Kari %A Laakso, Markku %A Lin, Xu %A Lind, Lars %A Liu, Yongmei %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Marchini, Jonathan %A Metspalu, Andres %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis %A Nordestgaard, Børge G %A Palmer, Colin N A %A Pankow, James S %A Pedersen, Oluf %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Sattar, Naveed %A Schulze, Matthias B %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stefansson, Kari %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tuomi, Tiinamaija %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wilson, James G %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Scott, Robert A %A Barroso, Inês %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Meigs, James B %A Boehnke, Michael %A Saleheen, Danish %A Morris, Andrew P %A Rotter, Jerome I %A McCarthy, Mark I %X

We aggregated coding variant data for 81,412 type 2 diabetes cases and 370,832 controls of diverse ancestry, identifying 40 coding variant association signals (P < 2.2 × 10); of these, 16 map outside known risk-associated loci. We make two important observations. First, only five of these signals are driven by low-frequency variants: even for these, effect sizes are modest (odds ratio ≤1.29). Second, when we used large-scale genome-wide association data to fine-map the associated variants in their regional context, accounting for the global enrichment of complex trait associations in coding sequence, compelling evidence for coding variant causality was obtained for only 16 signals. At 13 others, the associated coding variants clearly represent 'false leads' with potential to generate erroneous mechanistic inference. Coding variant associations offer a direct route to biological insight for complex diseases and identification of validated therapeutic targets; however, appropriate mechanistic inference requires careful specification of their causal contribution to disease predisposition.

%B Nat Genet %V 50 %P 559-571 %8 2018 Apr %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1038/s41588-018-0084-1 %0 Journal Article %J Diabetologia %D 2018 %T Sugar-sweetened beverage intake associations with fasting glucose and insulin concentrations are not modified by selected genetic variants in a ChREBP-FGF21 pathway: a meta-analysis. %A McKeown, Nicola M %A Dashti, Hassan S %A Ma, Jiantao %A Haslam, Danielle E %A Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C %A Smith, Caren E %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Rybin, Denis %A Sonestedt, Emily %A Frazier-Wood, Alexis C %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Li, Yanping %A Wang, Carol A %A Leermakers, Elisabeth T M %A Mikkilä, Vera %A Young, Kristin L %A Mukamal, Kenneth J %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Schulz, Christina-Alexandra %A Chen, Tzu-An %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Huang, Tao %A Oddy, Wendy H %A Raitakari, Olli %A Rice, Kenneth %A Meigs, James B %A Ericson, Ulrika %A Steffen, Lyn M %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Hofman, Albert %A Kähönen, Mika %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Brunkwall, Louise %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Viikari, Jorma %A Siscovick, David S %A Seppälä, Ilkka %A North, Kari E %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Dupuis, Josée %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Rich, Stephen S %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Qi, Lu %A Pennell, Craig E %A Franco, Oscar H %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Herman, Mark A %X

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are a major dietary contributor to fructose intake. A molecular pathway involving the carbohydrate responsive element-binding protein (ChREBP) and the metabolic hormone fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) may influence sugar metabolism and, thereby, contribute to fructose-induced metabolic disease. We hypothesise that common variants in 11 genes involved in fructose metabolism and the ChREBP-FGF21 pathway may interact with SSB intake to exacerbate positive associations between higher SSB intake and glycaemic traits.

METHODS: Data from 11 cohorts (six discovery and five replication) in the CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology) Consortium provided association and interaction results from 34,748 adults of European descent. SSB intake (soft drinks, fruit punches, lemonades or other fruit drinks) was derived from food-frequency questionnaires and food diaries. In fixed-effects meta-analyses, we quantified: (1) the associations between SSBs and glycaemic traits (fasting glucose and fasting insulin); and (2) the interactions between SSBs and 18 independent SNPs related to the ChREBP-FGF21 pathway.

RESULTS: In our combined meta-analyses of discovery and replication cohorts, after adjustment for age, sex, energy intake, BMI and other dietary covariates, each additional serving of SSB intake was associated with higher fasting glucose (β ± SE 0.014 ± 0.004 [mmol/l], p = 1.5 × 10-3) and higher fasting insulin (0.030 ± 0.005 [log e pmol/l], p = 2.0 × 10-10). No significant interactions on glycaemic traits were observed between SSB intake and selected SNPs. While a suggestive interaction was observed in the discovery cohorts with a SNP (rs1542423) in the β-Klotho (KLB) locus on fasting insulin (0.030 ± 0.011 log e pmol/l, uncorrected p = 0.006), results in the replication cohorts and combined meta-analyses were non-significant.

CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: In this large meta-analysis, we observed that SSB intake was associated with higher fasting glucose and insulin. Although a suggestive interaction with a genetic variant in the ChREBP-FGF21 pathway was observed in the discovery cohorts, this observation was not confirmed in the replication analysis.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Trials related to this study were registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00005131 (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities), NCT00005133 (Cardiovascular Health Study), NCT00005121 (Framingham Offspring Study), NCT00005487 (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) and NCT00005152 (Nurses' Health Study).

%B Diabetologia %V 61 %P 317-330 %8 2018 Feb %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1007/s00125-017-4475-0 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2019 %T Associations of autozygosity with a broad range of human phenotypes. %A Clark, David W %A Okada, Yukinori %A Moore, Kristjan H S %A Mason, Dan %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Mattsson, Hannele %A Barnes, Catriona L K %A Lin, Kuang %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Deelen, Patrick %A Rohde, Rebecca %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Giulianini, Franco %A Zhang, Weihua %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Karlsson, Robert %A Bao, Yanchun %A Bartz, Traci M %A Baumbach, Clemens %A Biino, Ginevra %A Bixley, Matthew J %A Brumat, Marco %A Chai, Jin-Fang %A Corre, Tanguy %A Cousminer, Diana L %A Dekker, Annelot M %A Eccles, David A %A van Eijk, Kristel R %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Gao, He %A Germain, Marine %A Gordon, Scott D %A de Haan, Hugoline G %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hofer, Edith %A Huerta-Chagoya, Alicia %A Igartua, Catherine %A Jansen, Iris E %A Jia, Yucheng %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Karlsson, Torgny %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Li, Shengchao Alfred %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Meidtner, Karina %A Meng, Weihua %A Montasser, May E %A van der Most, Peter J %A Munz, Matthias %A Nutile, Teresa %A Palviainen, Teemu %A Prasad, Gauri %A Prasad, Rashmi B %A Priyanka, Tallapragada Divya Sri %A Rizzi, Federica %A Salvi, Erika %A Sapkota, Bishwa R %A Shriner, Daniel %A Skotte, Line %A Smart, Melissa C %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A van der Spek, Ashley %A Spracklen, Cassandra N %A Strawbridge, Rona J %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Trompet, Stella %A Turman, Constance %A Verweij, Niek %A Viberti, Clara %A Wang, Lihua %A Warren, Helen R %A Wootton, Robyn E %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Yao, Jie %A Yousri, Noha A %A Zhao, Wei %A Adeyemo, Adebowale A %A Afaq, Saima %A Aguilar-Salinas, Carlos Alberto %A Akiyama, Masato %A Albert, Matthew L %A Allison, Matthew A %A Alver, Maris %A Aung, Tin %A Azizi, Fereidoun %A Bentley, Amy R %A Boeing, Heiner %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Borja, Judith B %A de Borst, Gert J %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Broer, Linda %A Campbell, Harry %A Chanock, Stephen %A Chee, Miao-Li %A Chen, Guanjie %A Chen, Yii-der I %A Chen, Zhengming %A Chiu, Yen-Feng %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Collins, Francis S %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Corley, Janie %A Cugliari, Giovanni %A van Dam, Rob M %A Damulina, Anna %A Daneshpour, Maryam S %A Day, Felix R %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Dhana, Klodian %A Doney, Alexander S F %A Dörr, Marcus %A Doumatey, Ayo P %A Dzimiri, Nduna %A Ebenesersdóttir, S Sunna %A Elliott, Joshua %A Elliott, Paul %A Ewert, Ralf %A Felix, Janine F %A Fischer, Krista %A Freedman, Barry I %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Goel, Anuj %A Gögele, Martin %A Goodarzi, Mark O %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Granot-Hershkovitz, Einat %A Grodstein, Francine %A Guarrera, Simonetta %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Guity, Kamran %A Gunnarsson, Bjarni %A Guo, Yu %A Hagenaars, Saskia P %A Haiman, Christopher A %A Halevy, Avner %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hedayati, Mehdi %A van Heel, David A %A Hirata, Makoto %A Höfer, Imo %A Hsiung, Chao Agnes %A Huang, Jinyan %A Hung, Yi-Jen %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jagadeesan, Anuradha %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kanai, Masahiro %A Kerrison, Nicola D %A Kessler, Thorsten %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A de Kleijn, Dominique P V %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kraft, Peter %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lawlor, Deborah A %A Lee, I-Te %A Lee, Wen-Jane %A Lerch, Markus M %A Li, Liming %A Liu, Jianjun %A Loh, Marie %A London, Stephanie J %A Loomis, Stephanie %A Lu, Yingchang %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mägi, Reedik %A Manichaikul, Ani W %A Manunta, Paolo %A Másson, Gísli %A Matoba, Nana %A Mei, Xue W %A Meisinger, Christa %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Mezzavilla, Massimo %A Milani, Lili %A Millwood, Iona Y %A Momozawa, Yukihide %A Moore, Amy %A Morange, Pierre-Emmanuel %A Moreno-Macias, Hortensia %A Mori, Trevor A %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Muka, Taulant %A Murakami, Yoshinori %A Murray, Alison D %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nauck, Matthias %A Neville, Matt J %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Ong, Ken K %A Orozco, Lorena %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Pálsson, Gunnar %A Pankow, James S %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Pattie, Alison %A Polasek, Ozren %A Poulter, Neil %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Quintana-Murci, Lluis %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Ralhan, Sarju %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A van Rheenen, Wouter %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rietveld, Cornelius A %A Robino, Antonietta %A van Rooij, Frank J A %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Saba, Yasaman %A Sabanayagam, Charumathi %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Sala, Cinzia Felicita %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Sandow, Kevin %A Schmidt, Helena %A Scott, Laura J %A Scott, William R %A Sedaghati-Khayat, Bahareh %A Sennblad, Bengt %A van Setten, Jessica %A Sever, Peter J %A Sheu, Wayne H-H %A Shi, Yuan %A Shrestha, Smeeta %A Shukla, Sharvari Rahul %A Sigurdsson, Jon K %A Sikka, Timo Tonis %A Singh, Jai Rup %A Smith, Blair H %A Stančáková, Alena %A Stanton, Alice %A Starr, John M %A Stefansdottir, Lilja %A Straker, Leon %A Sulem, Patrick %A Sveinbjornsson, Gardar %A Swertz, Morris A %A Taylor, Adele M %A Taylor, Kent D %A Terzikhan, Natalie %A Tham, Yih-Chung %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tillander, Annika %A Tracy, Russell P %A Tusié-Luna, Teresa %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Vaccargiu, Simona %A Vangipurapu, Jagadish %A Veldink, Jan H %A Vitart, Veronique %A Völker, Uwe %A Vuoksimaa, Eero %A Wakil, Salma M %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wander, Gurpreet S %A Wang, Ya Xing %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Wild, Sarah %A Yajnik, Chittaranjan S %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zeng, Lingyao %A Zhang, Liang %A Zhou, Jie %A Amin, Najaf %A Asselbergs, Folkert W %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Becker, Diane M %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Bennett, David A %A van den Berg, Leonard H %A Berndt, Sonja I %A Bharadwaj, Dwaipayan %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boehnke, Mike %A Bouchard, Claude %A Bradfield, Jonathan P %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Campbell, Archie %A Carmi, Shai %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Cesarini, David %A Chambers, John C %A Chandak, Giriraj Ratan %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Ciullo, Marina %A Cornelis, Marilyn %A Cusi, Daniele %A Smith, George Davey %A Deary, Ian J %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Ellinghaus, David %A Erdmann, Jeanette %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Evans, Michele K %A Faul, Jessica D %A Feenstra, Bjarke %A Feitosa, Mary %A Foisy, Sylvain %A Franke, Andre %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Gonzalez, Clicerio %A Goyette, Philippe %A Grant, Struan F A %A Griffiths, Lyn R %A Groop, Leif %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Gyllensten, Ulf %A Hakonarson, Hakon %A Hamsten, Anders %A van der Harst, Pim %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hochner, Hagit %A Huikuri, Heikki %A Hunt, Steven C %A Jaddoe, Vincent W V %A De Jager, Philip L %A Johannesson, Magnus %A Johansson, Asa %A Jonas, Jost B %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Junttila, Juhani %A Kaprio, Jaakko %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Karpe, Fredrik %A Kumari, Meena %A Laakso, Markku %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Lahti, Jari %A Laudes, Matthias %A Lea, Rodney A %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Lumley, Thomas %A Martin, Nicholas G %A März, Winfried %A Matullo, Giuseppe %A McCarthy, Mark I %A Medland, Sarah E %A Merriman, Tony R %A Metspalu, Andres %A Meyer, Brian F %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis %A Munroe, Patricia B %A North, Kari E %A Nyholt, Dale R %A O'Connell, Jeffery R %A Ober, Carole %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Palmas, Walter %A Palmer, Colin %A Pasterkamp, Gerard G %A Patin, Etienne %A Pennell, Craig E %A Perusse, Louis %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Pirastu, Mario %A Polderman, Tinca J C %A Porteous, David J %A Posthuma, Danielle %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rioux, John D %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotimi, Charles %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A den Ruijter, Hester M %A Sanghera, Dharambir K %A Sattar, Naveed %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schulze, Matthias B %A Schunkert, Heribert %A Scott, Robert A %A Shuldiner, Alan R %A Sim, Xueling %A Small, Neil %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Tai, E-Shyong %A Teumer, Alexander %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Trégouët, David-Alexandre %A Tuomi, Tiinamaija %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wang, Carol A %A Weir, David R %A Whitfield, John B %A Wijmenga, Cisca %A Wong, Tien-Yin %A Wright, John %A Yang, Jingyun %A Yu, Lei %A Zemel, Babette S %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Perola, Markus %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Franceschini, Nora %A Franke, Lude %A Haley, Chris S %A Hayward, Caroline %A Walters, Robin G %A Perry, John R B %A Esko, Tõnu %A Helgason, Agnar %A Stefansson, Kari %A Joshi, Peter K %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Wilson, James F %X

In many species, the offspring of related parents suffer reduced reproductive success, a phenomenon known as inbreeding depression. In humans, the importance of this effect has remained unclear, partly because reproduction between close relatives is both rare and frequently associated with confounding social factors. Here, using genomic inbreeding coefficients (F) for >1.4 million individuals, we show that F is significantly associated (p < 0.0005) with apparently deleterious changes in 32 out of 100 traits analysed. These changes are associated with runs of homozygosity (ROH), but not with common variant homozygosity, suggesting that genetic variants associated with inbreeding depression are predominantly rare. The effect on fertility is striking: F equivalent to the offspring of first cousins is associated with a 55% decrease [95% CI 44-66%] in the odds of having children. Finally, the effects of F are confirmed within full-sibling pairs, where the variation in F is independent of all environmental confounding.

%B Nat Commun %V 10 %P 4957 %8 2019 Oct 31 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-019-12283-6 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2019 %T A catalog of genetic loci associated with kidney function from analyses of a million individuals. %A Wuttke, Matthias %A Li, Yong %A Li, Man %A Sieber, Karsten B %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Gorski, Mathias %A Tin, Adrienne %A Wang, Lihua %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Hoppmann, Anselm %A Kirsten, Holger %A Giri, Ayush %A Chai, Jin-Fang %A Sveinbjornsson, Gardar %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Nutile, Teresa %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Marten, Jonathan %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Ghasemi, Sahar %A Xu, Yizhe %A Horn, Katrin %A Noce, Damia %A van der Most, Peter J %A Sedaghat, Sanaz %A Yu, Zhi %A Akiyama, Masato %A Afaq, Saima %A Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S %A Almgren, Peter %A Amin, Najaf %A Arnlöv, Johan %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Bansal, Nisha %A Baptista, Daniela %A Bergmann, Sven %A Biggs, Mary L %A Biino, Ginevra %A Boehnke, Michael %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Boutin, Thibaud S %A Brenner, Hermann %A Brumat, Marco %A Burkhardt, Ralph %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Campana, Eric %A Campbell, Archie %A Campbell, Harry %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Carroll, Robert J %A Catamo, Eulalia %A Chambers, John C %A Chee, Miao-Ling %A Chee, Miao-Li %A Chen, Xu %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Cheng, Yurong %A Christensen, Kaare %A Cifkova, Renata %A Ciullo, Marina %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Cook, James P %A Coresh, Josef %A Corre, Tanguy %A Sala, Cinzia Felicita %A Cusi, Daniele %A Danesh, John %A Daw, E Warwick %A de Borst, Martin H %A De Grandi, Alessandro %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Vries, Aiko P J %A Degenhardt, Frauke %A Delgado, Graciela %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Di Angelantonio, Emanuele %A Dittrich, Katalin %A Divers, Jasmin %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Eckardt, Kai-Uwe %A Ehret, Georg %A Elliott, Paul %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Evans, Michele K %A Felix, Janine F %A Foo, Valencia Hui Xian %A Franco, Oscar H %A Franke, Andre %A Freedman, Barry I %A Freitag-Wolf, Sandra %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gansevoort, Ron T %A Gao, He %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gaziano, J Michael %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Gieger, Christian %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Giulianini, Franco %A Gögele, Martin %A Gordon, Scott D %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Haller, Toomas %A Hamet, Pavel %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hartman, Catharina A %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hellwege, Jacklyn N %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hofer, Edith %A Huang, Wei %A Hutri-Kähönen, Nina %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Indridason, Olafur S %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Ising, Marcus %A Jaddoe, Vincent W V %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Jonas, Jost B %A Joshi, Peter K %A Josyula, Navya Shilpa %A Jung, Bettina %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kammerer, Candace M %A Kanai, Masahiro %A Kastarinen, Mika %A Kerr, Shona M %A Khor, Chiea-Chuen %A Kiess, Wieland %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Körner, Antje %A Kovacs, Peter %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Krajcoviechova, Alena %A Kramer, Holly %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Kuokkanen, Mikko %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A La Bianca, Martina %A Laakso, Markku %A Lange, Leslie A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Lee, Jeannette Jen-Mai %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Lieb, Wolfgang %A Lim, Su-Chi %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Liu, Jun %A Liu, Jianjun %A Loeffler, Markus %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lucae, Susanne %A Lukas, Mary Ann %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Mägi, Reedik %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Martins, Jade %A März, Winfried %A Mascalzoni, Deborah %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Meisinger, Christa %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Melander, Olle %A Metspalu, Andres %A Mikaelsdottir, Evgenia K %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Miliku, Kozeta %A Mishra, Pashupati P %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mononen, Nina %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Mychaleckyj, Josyf C %A Nadkarni, Girish N %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nikus, Kjell %A Ning, Boting %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Noordam, Raymond %A O'Connell, Jeffrey %A O'Donoghue, Michelle L %A Olafsson, Isleifur %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Orho-Melander, Marju %A Ouwehand, Willem H %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Palsson, Runolfur %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Perls, Thomas %A Perola, Markus %A Pirastu, Mario %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Podgornaia, Anna I %A Polasek, Ozren %A Ponte, Belen %A Porteous, David J %A Poulain, Tanja %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Preuss, Michael H %A Prins, Bram P %A Province, Michael A %A Rabelink, Ton J %A Raffield, Laura M %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reilly, Dermot F %A Rettig, Rainer %A Rheinberger, Myriam %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rizzi, Federica %A Roberts, David J %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rossing, Peter %A Rudan, Igor %A Rueedi, Rico %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Ryan, Kathleen A %A Saba, Yasaman %A Sabanayagam, Charumathi %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Salvi, Erika %A Saum, Kai-Uwe %A Schmidt, Helena %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Schöttker, Ben %A Schulz, Christina-Alexandra %A Schupf, Nicole %A Shaffer, Christian M %A Shi, Yuan %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Blair H %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Spracklen, Cassandra N %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Stringham, Heather M %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Svensson, Per O %A Szymczak, Silke %A Tai, E-Shyong %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Tan, Nicholas Y Q %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teren, Andrej %A Tham, Yih-Chung %A Thiery, Joachim %A Thio, Chris H L %A Thomsen, Hauke %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tremblay, Johanne %A Tzoulaki, Ioanna %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaccargiu, Simona %A van Dam, Rob M %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Velez Edward, Digna R %A Verweij, Niek %A Vogelezang, Suzanne %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wallentin, Lars %A Wang, Ya Xing %A Wang, Chaolong %A Waterworth, Dawn M %A Bin Wei, Wen %A White, Harvey %A Whitfield, John B %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wilson, James F %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Wong, Charlene %A Wong, Tien-Yin %A Xu, Liang %A Yang, Qiong %A Yasuda, Masayuki %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Bochud, Murielle %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Vitart, Veronique %A Wilson, James G %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Parsa, Afshin %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Ho, Kevin %A Morris, Andrew P %A Devuyst, Olivier %A Akilesh, Shreeram %A Pendergrass, Sarah A %A Sim, Xueling %A Böger, Carsten A %A Okada, Yukinori %A Edwards, Todd L %A Snieder, Harold %A Stefansson, Kari %A Hung, Adriana M %A Heid, Iris M %A Scholz, Markus %A Teumer, Alexander %A Köttgen, Anna %A Pattaro, Cristian %K Chromosome Mapping %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Association Studies %K Genetic Predisposition to Disease %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Glomerular Filtration Rate %K Humans %K Inheritance Patterns %K Kidney Function Tests %K Phenotype %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Quantitative Trait Loci %K Quantitative Trait, Heritable %K Renal Insufficiency, Chronic %K Uromodulin %X

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is responsible for a public health burden with multi-systemic complications. Through trans-ancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and independent replication (n = 1,046,070), we identified 264 associated loci (166 new). Of these, 147 were likely to be relevant for kidney function on the basis of associations with the alternative kidney function marker blood urea nitrogen (n = 416,178). Pathway and enrichment analyses, including mouse models with renal phenotypes, support the kidney as the main target organ. A genetic risk score for lower eGFR was associated with clinically diagnosed CKD in 452,264 independent individuals. Colocalization analyses of associations with eGFR among 783,978 European-ancestry individuals and gene expression across 46 human tissues, including tubulo-interstitial and glomerular kidney compartments, identified 17 genes differentially expressed in kidney. Fine-mapping highlighted missense driver variants in 11 genes and kidney-specific regulatory variants. These results provide a comprehensive priority list of molecular targets for translational research.

%B Nat Genet %V 51 %P 957-972 %8 2019 06 %G eng %N 6 %R 10.1038/s41588-019-0407-x %0 Journal Article %J Am J Clin Nutr %D 2019 %T Disentangling the genetics of lean mass. %A Karasik, David %A Zillikens, M Carola %A Hsu, Yi-Hsiang %A Aghdassi, Ali %A Åkesson, Kristina %A Amin, Najaf %A Barroso, Inês %A Bennett, David A %A Bertram, Lars %A Bochud, Murielle %A Borecki, Ingrid B %A Broer, Linda %A Buchman, Aron S %A Byberg, Liisa %A Campbell, Harry %A Campos-Obando, Natalia %A Cauley, Jane A %A Cawthon, Peggy M %A Chambers, John C %A Chen, Zhao %A Cho, Nam H %A Choi, Hyung Jin %A Chou, Wen-Chi %A Cummings, Steven R %A de Groot, Lisette C P G M %A De Jager, Phillip L %A Demuth, Ilja %A Diatchenko, Luda %A Econs, Michael J %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Enneman, Anke W %A Eriksson, Joel %A Eriksson, Johan G %A Estrada, Karol %A Evans, Daniel S %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Fu, Mao %A Gieger, Christian %A Grallert, Harald %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Lenore, Launer J %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hofman, Albert %A Homuth, Georg %A Huffman, Kim M %A Husted, Lise B %A Illig, Thomas %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Ittermann, Till %A Jansson, John-Olov %A Johnson, Toby %A Biffar, Reiner %A Jordan, Joanne M %A Jula, Antti %A Karlsson, Magnus %A Khaw, Kay-Tee %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Klopp, Norman %A Kloth, Jacqueline S L %A Koller, Daniel L %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Kraus, William E %A Kritchevsky, Stephen %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Kuulasmaa, Teemu %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Laakso, Markku %A Lahti, Jari %A Lang, Thomas %A Langdahl, Bente L %A Lerch, Markus M %A Lewis, Joshua R %A Lill, Christina %A Lind, Lars %A Lindgren, Cecilia %A Liu, Yongmei %A Livshits, Gregory %A Ljunggren, Osten %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lorentzon, Mattias %A Luan, Jian'an %A Luben, Robert N %A Malkin, Ida %A McGuigan, Fiona E %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Melhus, Håkan %A Mellström, Dan %A Michaëlsson, Karl %A Mitchell, Braxton D %A Morris, Andrew P %A Mosekilde, Leif %A Nethander, Maria %A Newman, Anne B %A O'Connell, Jeffery R %A Oostra, Ben A %A Orwoll, Eric S %A Palotie, Aarno %A Peacock, Munro %A Perola, Markus %A Peters, Annette %A Prince, Richard L %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Räikkönen, Katri %A Ralston, Stuart H %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Robbins, John A %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Satterfield, Suzanne %A Schipf, Sabine %A Shin, Chan Soo %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Shad B %A Soranzo, Nicole %A Spector, Timothy D %A Stančáková, Alena %A Stefansson, Kari %A Steinhagen-Thiessen, Elisabeth %A Stolk, Lisette %A Streeten, Elizabeth A %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Swart, Karin M A %A Thompson, Patricia %A Thomson, Cynthia A %A Thorleifsson, Gudmar %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Tikkanen, Emmi %A Tranah, Gregory J %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A van Schoor, Natasja M %A Vandenput, Liesbeth %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Völzke, Henry %A Wactawski-Wende, Jean %A Walker, Mark %A J Wareham, Nicholas %A Waterworth, Dawn %A Weedon, Michael N %A Wichmann, H-Erich %A Widen, Elisabeth %A Williams, Frances M K %A Wilson, James F %A Wright, Nicole C %A Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M %A Yu, Lei %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Zhou, Yanhua %A Nielson, Carrie M %A Harris, Tamara B %A Demissie, Serkalem %A Kiel, Douglas P %A Ohlsson, Claes %X

Background: Lean body mass (LM) plays an important role in mobility and metabolic function. We previously identified five loci associated with LM adjusted for fat mass in kilograms. Such an adjustment may reduce the power to identify genetic signals having an association with both lean mass and fat mass.

Objectives: To determine the impact of different fat mass adjustments on genetic architecture of LM and identify additional LM loci.

Methods: We performed genome-wide association analyses for whole-body LM (20 cohorts of European ancestry with n = 38,292) measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) or bioelectrical impedance analysis, adjusted for sex, age, age2, and height with or without fat mass adjustments (Model 1 no fat adjustment; Model 2 adjustment for fat mass as a percentage of body mass; Model 3 adjustment for fat mass in kilograms).

Results: Seven single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in separate loci, including one novel LM locus (TNRC6B), were successfully replicated in an additional 47,227 individuals from 29 cohorts. Based on the strengths of the associations in Model 1 vs Model 3, we divided the LM loci into those with an effect on both lean mass and fat mass in the same direction and refer to those as "sumo wrestler" loci (FTO and MC4R). In contrast, loci with an impact specifically on LM were termed "body builder" loci (VCAN and ADAMTSL3). Using existing available genome-wide association study databases, LM increasing alleles of SNPs in sumo wrestler loci were associated with an adverse metabolic profile, whereas LM increasing alleles of SNPs in "body builder" loci were associated with metabolic protection.

Conclusions: In conclusion, we identified one novel LM locus (TNRC6B). Our results suggest that a genetically determined increase in lean mass might exert either harmful or protective effects on metabolic traits, depending on its relation to fat mass.

%B Am J Clin Nutr %V 109 %P 276-287 %8 2019 Feb 01 %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1093/ajcn/nqy272 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2019 %T Genetic architecture of subcortical brain structures in 38,851 individuals. %A Satizabal, Claudia L %A Adams, Hieab H H %A Hibar, Derrek P %A White, Charles C %A Knol, Maria J %A Stein, Jason L %A Scholz, Markus %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Jahanshad, Neda %A Roshchupkin, Gennady V %A Smith, Albert V %A Bis, Joshua C %A Jian, Xueqiu %A Luciano, Michelle %A Hofer, Edith %A Teumer, Alexander %A van der Lee, Sven J %A Yang, Jingyun %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Lee, Tom V %A Li, Shuo %A Hu, Yanhui %A Koh, Jia Yu %A Eicher, John D %A Desrivières, Sylvane %A Arias-Vasquez, Alejandro %A Chauhan, Ganesh %A Athanasiu, Lavinia %A Rentería, Miguel E %A Kim, Sungeun %A Hoehn, David %A Armstrong, Nicola J %A Chen, Qiang %A Holmes, Avram J %A den Braber, Anouk %A Kloszewska, Iwona %A Andersson, Micael %A Espeseth, Thomas %A Grimm, Oliver %A Abramovic, Lucija %A Alhusaini, Saud %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Papmeyer, Martina %A Axelsson, Tomas %A Ehrlich, Stefan %A Roiz-Santiañez, Roberto %A Kraemer, Bernd %A Håberg, Asta K %A Jones, Hannah J %A Pike, G Bruce %A Stein, Dan J %A Stevens, Allison %A Bralten, Janita %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Harris, Tamara B %A Filippi, Irina %A Witte, A Veronica %A Guadalupe, Tulio %A Wittfeld, Katharina %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Becker, James T %A Doan, Nhat Trung %A Hagenaars, Saskia P %A Saba, Yasaman %A Cuellar-Partida, Gabriel %A Amin, Najaf %A Hilal, Saima %A Nho, Kwangsik %A Mirza-Schreiber, Nazanin %A Arfanakis, Konstantinos %A Becker, Diane M %A Ames, David %A Goldman, Aaron L %A Lee, Phil H %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Lovestone, Simon %A Giddaluru, Sudheer %A Le Hellard, Stephanie %A Mattheisen, Manuel %A Bohlken, Marc M %A Kasperaviciute, Dalia %A Schmaal, Lianne %A Lawrie, Stephen M %A Agartz, Ingrid %A Walton, Esther %A Tordesillas-Gutierrez, Diana %A Davies, Gareth E %A Shin, Jean %A Ipser, Jonathan C %A Vinke, Louis N %A Hoogman, Martine %A Jia, Tianye %A Burkhardt, Ralph %A Klein, Marieke %A Crivello, Fabrice %A Janowitz, Deborah %A Carmichael, Owen %A Haukvik, Unn K %A Aribisala, Benjamin S %A Schmidt, Helena %A Strike, Lachlan T %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Risacher, Shannon L %A Pütz, Benno %A Fleischman, Debra A %A Assareh, Amelia A %A Mattay, Venkata S %A Buckner, Randy L %A Mecocci, Patrizia %A Dale, Anders M %A Cichon, Sven %A Boks, Marco P %A Matarin, Mar %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Calhoun, Vince D %A Chakravarty, M Mallar %A Marquand, Andre F %A Macare, Christine %A Kharabian Masouleh, Shahrzad %A Oosterlaan, Jaap %A Amouyel, Philippe %A Hegenscheid, Katrin %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schork, Andrew J %A Liewald, David C M %A de Zubicaray, Greig I %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Shen, Li %A Sämann, Philipp G %A Brodaty, Henry %A Roffman, Joshua L %A de Geus, Eco J C %A Tsolaki, Magda %A Erk, Susanne %A van Eijk, Kristel R %A Cavalleri, Gianpiero L %A van der Wee, Nic J A %A McIntosh, Andrew M %A Gollub, Randy L %A Bulayeva, Kazima B %A Bernard, Manon %A Richards, Jennifer S %A Himali, Jayandra J %A Loeffler, Markus %A Rommelse, Nanda %A Hoffmann, Wolfgang %A Westlye, Lars T %A Valdés Hernández, Maria C %A Hansell, Narelle K %A van Erp, Theo G M %A Wolf, Christiane %A Kwok, John B J %A Vellas, Bruno %A Heinz, Andreas %A Olde Loohuis, Loes M %A Delanty, Norman %A Ho, Beng-Choon %A Ching, Christopher R K %A Shumskaya, Elena %A Singh, Baljeet %A Hofman, Albert %A van der Meer, Dennis %A Homuth, Georg %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Bastin, Mark E %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Foroud, Tatiana M %A Reppermund, Simone %A Hottenga, Jouke-Jan %A Simmons, Andrew %A Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas %A Cahn, Wiepke %A Whelan, Christopher D %A van Donkelaar, Marjolein M J %A Yang, Qiong %A Hosten, Norbert %A Green, Robert C %A Thalamuthu, Anbupalam %A Mohnke, Sebastian %A Hulshoff Pol, Hilleke E %A Lin, Honghuang %A Jack, Clifford R %A Schofield, Peter R %A Mühleisen, Thomas W %A Maillard, Pauline %A Potkin, Steven G %A Wen, Wei %A Fletcher, Evan %A Toga, Arthur W %A Gruber, Oliver %A Huentelman, Matthew %A Davey Smith, George %A Launer, Lenore J %A Nyberg, Lars %A Jönsson, Erik G %A Crespo-Facorro, Benedicto %A Koen, Nastassja %A Greve, Douglas N %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Weinberger, Daniel R %A Steen, Vidar M %A Fedko, Iryna O %A Groenewold, Nynke A %A Niessen, Wiro J %A Toro, Roberto %A Tzourio, Christophe %A Longstreth, William T %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Smoller, Jordan W %A van Tol, Marie-Jose %A Sussmann, Jessika E %A Paus, Tomáš %A Lemaître, Hervé %A Schroeter, Matthias L %A Mazoyer, Bernard %A Andreassen, Ole A %A Holsboer, Florian %A Depondt, Chantal %A Veltman, Dick J %A Turner, Jessica A %A Pausova, Zdenka %A Schumann, Gunter %A van Rooij, Daan %A Djurovic, Srdjan %A Deary, Ian J %A McMahon, Katie L %A Müller-Myhsok, Bertram %A Brouwer, Rachel M %A Soininen, Hilkka %A Pandolfo, Massimo %A Wassink, Thomas H %A Cheung, Joshua W %A Wolfers, Thomas %A Martinot, Jean-Luc %A Zwiers, Marcel P %A Nauck, Matthias %A Melle, Ingrid %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Kanai, Ryota %A Westman, Eric %A Kahn, René S %A Sisodiya, Sanjay M %A White, Tonya %A Saremi, Arvin %A van Bokhoven, Hans %A Brunner, Han G %A Völzke, Henry %A Wright, Margaret J %A van 't Ent, Dennis %A Nöthen, Markus M %A Ophoff, Roel A %A Buitelaar, Jan K %A Fernández, Guillén %A Sachdev, Perminder S %A Rietschel, Marcella %A van Haren, Neeltje E M %A Fisher, Simon E %A Beiser, Alexa S %A Francks, Clyde %A Saykin, Andrew J %A Mather, Karen A %A Romanczuk-Seiferth, Nina %A Hartman, Catharina A %A DeStefano, Anita L %A Heslenfeld, Dirk J %A Weiner, Michael W %A Walter, Henrik %A Hoekstra, Pieter J %A Nyquist, Paul A %A Franke, Barbara %A Bennett, David A %A Grabe, Hans J %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Chen, Christopher %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Lopez, Oscar L %A Fornage, Myriam %A Wardlaw, Joanna M %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A DeCarli, Charles %A De Jager, Philip L %A Villringer, Arno %A Debette, Stephanie %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Medland, Sarah E %A Shulman, Joshua M %A Thompson, Paul M %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Ikram, M Arfan %X

Subcortical brain structures are integral to motion, consciousness, emotions and learning. We identified common genetic variation related to the volumes of the nucleus accumbens, amygdala, brainstem, caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, putamen and thalamus, using genome-wide association analyses in almost 40,000 individuals from CHARGE, ENIGMA and UK Biobank. We show that variability in subcortical volumes is heritable, and identify 48 significantly associated loci (40 novel at the time of analysis). Annotation of these loci by utilizing gene expression, methylation and neuropathological data identified 199 genes putatively implicated in neurodevelopment, synaptic signaling, axonal transport, apoptosis, inflammation/infection and susceptibility to neurological disorders. This set of genes is significantly enriched for Drosophila orthologs associated with neurodevelopmental phenotypes, suggesting evolutionarily conserved mechanisms. Our findings uncover novel biology and potential drug targets underlying brain development and disease.

%B Nat Genet %V 51 %P 1624-1636 %8 2019 Nov %G eng %N 11 %R 10.1038/s41588-019-0511-y %0 Journal Article %J Blood %D 2019 %T A genome-wide association study identifies new loci for factor VII and implicates factor VII in ischemic stroke etiology. %A de Vries, Paul S %A Sabater-Lleal, Maria %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Marten, Jonathan %A Song, Ci %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Bartz, Traci M %A de Haan, Hugoline G %A Delgado, Graciela E %A Eicher, John D %A Martinez-Perez, Angel %A Ward-Caviness, Cavin K %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Frånberg, Mattias %A Gill, Dipender %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Soria, José Manuel %A Tang, Weihong %A Tofler, Geoffrey H %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Hylckama Vlieg, Astrid %A Seshadri, Sudha %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Davies, Neil M %A Giese, Anne-Katrin %A Ikram, M Kamran %A Kittner, Steven J %A McKnight, Barbara %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Reiner, Alex P %A Sargurupremraj, Muralidharan %A Taylor, Kent D %A Fornage, Myriam %A Hamsten, Anders %A März, Winfried %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Souto, Juan Carlos %A Dehghan, Abbas %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Morrison, Alanna C %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Smith, Nicholas L %X

Factor VII (FVII) is an important component of the coagulation cascade. Few genetic loci regulating FVII activity and/or levels have been discovered to date. We conducted a meta-analysis of 9 genome-wide association studies of plasma FVII levels (7 FVII activity and 2 FVII antigen) among 27 495 participants of European and African ancestry. Each study performed ancestry-specific association analyses. Inverse variance weighted meta-analysis was performed within each ancestry group and then combined for a -ancestry meta-analysis. Our primary analysis included the 7 studies that measured FVII activity, and a secondary analysis included all 9 studies. We provided functional genomic validation for newly identified significant loci by silencing candidate genes in a human liver cell line (HuH7) using small-interfering RNA and then measuring messenger RNA and FVII protein expression. Lastly, we used meta-analysis results to perform Mendelian randomization analysis to estimate the causal effect of FVII activity on coronary artery disease, ischemic stroke (IS), and venous thromboembolism. We identified 2 novel ( and ) and 6 known loci associated with FVII activity, explaining 19.0% of the phenotypic variance. Adding FVII antigen data to the meta-analysis did not result in the discovery of further loci. Silencing in HuH7 cells upregulated FVII, whereas silencing downregulated FVII. Mendelian randomization analyses suggest that FVII activity has a positive causal effect on the risk of IS. Variants at and contribute to FVII activity by regulating expression levels. FVII activity appears to contribute to the etiology of IS in the general population.

%B Blood %V 133 %P 967-977 %8 2019 Feb 28 %G eng %N 9 %R 10.1182/blood-2018-05-849240 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2019 %T Mendelian randomization evaluation of causal effects of fibrinogen on incident coronary heart disease. %A Ward-Caviness, Cavin K %A de Vries, Paul S %A Wiggins, Kerri L %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Giulianini, Franco %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Groß, Stefan %A Petersman, Astrid %A Davey Smith, George %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Bowden, Jack %A Hemani, Gibran %A Müller-Nuraysid, Martina %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Tang, Weihong %A Fu, Yi-Ping %A Johnson, Andrew D %A Song, Ci %A de Maat, Moniek P M %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Franco, Oscar H %A Brody, Jennifer A %A McKnight, Barbara %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Becker, Diane M %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Bielinski, Suzette J %A Ridker, Paul M %A Taylor, Kent D %A Yao, Jie %A Tracy, Russell %A Delgado, Graciela %A Trompet, Stella %A Sattar, Naveed %A Jukema, J Wouter %A Becker, Lewis C %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Rotter, Jerome I %A März, Winfried %A Dörr, Marcus %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Dehghan, Abbas %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Smith, Nicholas L %A Peters, Annette %A Morrison, Alanna C %X

BACKGROUND: Fibrinogen is an essential hemostatic factor and cardiovascular disease risk factor. Early attempts at evaluating the causal effect of fibrinogen on coronary heart disease (CHD) and myocardial infraction (MI) using Mendelian randomization (MR) used single variant approaches, and did not take advantage of recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) or multi-variant, pleiotropy robust MR methodologies.

METHODS AND FINDINGS: We evaluated evidence for a causal effect of fibrinogen on both CHD and MI using MR. We used both an allele score approach and pleiotropy robust MR models. The allele score was composed of 38 fibrinogen-associated variants from recent GWAS. Initial analyses using the allele score used a meta-analysis of 11 European-ancestry prospective cohorts, free of CHD and MI at baseline, to examine incidence CHD and MI. We also applied 2 sample MR methods with data from a prevalent CHD and MI GWAS. Results are given in terms of the hazard ratio (HR) or odds ratio (OR), depending on the study design, and associated 95% confidence interval (CI). In single variant analyses no causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD or MI was observed. In multi-variant analyses using incidence CHD cases and the allele score approach, the estimated causal effect (HR) of a 1 g/L higher fibrinogen concentration was 1.62 (CI = 1.12, 2.36) when using incident cases and the allele score approach. In 2 sample MR analyses that accounted for pleiotropy, the causal estimate (OR) was reduced to 1.18 (CI = 0.98, 1.42) and 1.09 (CI = 0.89, 1.33) in the 2 most precise (smallest CI) models, out of 4 models evaluated. In the 2 sample MR analyses for MI, there was only very weak evidence of a causal effect in only 1 out of 4 models.

CONCLUSIONS: A small causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD is observed using multi-variant MR approaches which account for pleiotropy, but not single variant MR approaches. Taken together, results indicate that even with large sample sizes and multi-variant approaches MR analyses still cannot exclude the null when estimating the causal effect of fibrinogen on CHD, but that any potential causal effect is likely to be much smaller than observed in epidemiological studies.

%B PLoS One %V 14 %P e0216222 %8 2019 %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0216222 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Epidemiol %D 2019 %T Multi-Ancestry Genome-Wide Association Study of Lipid Levels Incorporating Gene-Alcohol Interactions. %A de Vries, Paul S %A Brown, Michael R %A Bentley, Amy R %A Sung, Yun J %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Schwander, Karen %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Franceschini, Nora %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Sim, Xueling %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Musani, Solomon K %A Li, Changwei %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Richard, Melissa A %A Noordam, Raymond %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Deng, Xuan %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Manning, Alisa K %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Smith, Albert V %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Alver, Maris %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Divers, Jasmin %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Gao, Chuan %A Goel, Anuj %A Hagemeijer, Yanick %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A He, Meian %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kasturiratne, Anuradhani %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Laguzzi, Federica %A Lee, Joseph H %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Matoba, Nana %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Pietzner, Maik %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Said, M Abdullah %A Scott, Robert A %A Sofer, Tamar %A Stančáková, Alena %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A van der Most, Peter J %A Varga, Tibor V %A Wang, Yajuan %A Ware, Erin B %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Afaq, Saima %A Amin, Najaf %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Arking, Dan E %A Aung, Tin %A Ballantyne, Christie %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Campbell, Archie %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Charumathi, Sabanayagam %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Connell, John M %A de Faire, Ulf %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Silva, H Janaka %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Dominiczak, Anna F %A Duan, Qing %A Eaton, Charles B %A Eppinga, Ruben N %A Faul, Jessica D %A Fisher, Virginia %A Forrester, Terrence %A Franco, Oscar H %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Giulianini, Franco %A Grabe, Hans J %A Grove, Megan L %A Gu, C Charles %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hirata, Makoto %A Hixson, James E %A Howard, Barbara V %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jacobs, David R %A Johnson, Craig %A Jonas, Jost Bruno %A Kammerer, Candace M %A Katsuya, Tomohiro %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Koistinen, Heikki A %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kritchevsky, Steve B %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Lakka, Timo A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Li, Yize %A Liang, Jingjing %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liu, Kiang %A Loh, Marie %A Louie, Tin %A Mägi, Reedik %A Manichaikul, Ani W %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Milani, Lili %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Mukamal, Kenneth J %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A O'Connell, Jeff R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Pazoki, Raha %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Poulter, Neil %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reiner, Alex P %A Rice, Treva K %A Rich, Stephen S %A Robino, Antonietta %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rudan, Igor %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Scott, William R %A Sever, Peter %A Shi, Yuan %A Sidney, Stephen %A Sims, Mario %A Smith, Blair H %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tan, Nicholas %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Tham, Yih Chung %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Heemst, Diana %A Vuckovic, Dragana %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Lihua %A Wang, Yujie %A Wang, Zhe %A Wei, Wen Bin %A Williams, Christine %A Wilson, Gregory %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Yao, Jie %A Yu, Bing %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhao, Wei %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bowden, Donald W %A Chambers, John C %A Deary, Ian J %A Esko, Tõnu %A Farrall, Martin %A Franks, Paul W %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kato, Norihiro %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Laakso, Markku %A Leander, Karin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Penninx, Brenda %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Scott, James %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wang, Ya Xing %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Weir, David R %A Wickremasinghe, Ananda R %A Zheng, Wei %A Elliott, Paul %A North, Kari E %A Bouchard, Claude %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Yongmei %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A van Dam, Rob M %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Fornage, Myriam %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Fox, Ervin R %A Hayward, Caroline %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Tai, E Shyong %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Liu, Jingmin %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Gauderman, W James %A Province, Michael A %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Rice, Kenneth %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Morrison, Alanna C %X

An individual's lipid profile is influenced by genetic variants and alcohol consumption, but the contribution of interactions between these exposures has not been studied. We therefore incorporated gene-alcohol interactions into a multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides. We included 45 studies in Stage 1 (genome-wide discovery) and 66 studies in Stage 2 (focused follow-up), for a total of 394,584 individuals from five ancestry groups. Genetic main and interaction effects were jointly assessed by a 2 degrees of freedom (DF) test, and a 1 DF test was used to assess the interaction effects alone. Variants at 495 loci were at least suggestively associated (P < 1 × 10-6) with lipid levels in Stage 1 and were evaluated in Stage 2, followed by combined analyses of Stage 1 and Stage 2. In the combined analysis of Stage 1 and Stage 2, 147 independent loci were associated with lipid levels at P < 5 × 10-8 using 2 DF tests, of which 18 were novel. No genome-wide significant associations were found testing the interaction effect alone. The novel loci included several genes (PCSK5, VEGFB, and A1CF) with a putative role in lipid metabolism based on existing evidence from cellular and experimental models.

%B Am J Epidemiol %8 2019 Jan 29 %G eng %R 10.1093/aje/kwz005 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2019 %T Multi-ancestry genome-wide gene-smoking interaction study of 387,272 individuals identifies new loci associated with serum lipids. %A Bentley, Amy R %A Sung, Yun J %A Brown, Michael R %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Schwander, Karen %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Lim, Elise %A Deng, Xuan %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Liu, Jingmin %A Lu, Yingchang %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Sim, Xueling %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Musani, Solomon K %A Li, Changwei %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Richard, Melissa A %A Noordam, Raymond %A Baker, Jenna %A Chen, Guanjie %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Manning, Alisa K %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Smith, Albert V %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Zhao, Wei %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Alver, Maris %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Divers, Jasmin %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Gao, Chuan %A Goel, Anuj %A Hagemeijer, Yanick %A Harris, Sarah E %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A He, Meian %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Hung, Yi-Jen %A Jackson, Anne U %A Kasturiratne, Anuradhani %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Leander, Karin %A Lin, Keng-Hung %A Luan, Jian'an %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Matoba, Nana %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Pietzner, Maik %A Prins, Bram %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Robino, Antonietta %A Said, M Abdullah %A Schupf, Nicole %A Scott, Robert A %A Sofer, Tamar %A Stančáková, Alena %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A van der Most, Peter J %A Varga, Tibor V %A Wang, Tzung-Dau %A Wang, Yajuan %A Ware, Erin B %A Wen, Wanqing %A Xiang, Yong-Bing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Adeyemo, Adebowale %A Afaq, Saima %A Amin, Najaf %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Arking, Dan E %A Arzumanyan, Zorayr %A Aung, Tin %A Ballantyne, Christie %A Barr, R Graham %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Brown, Morris %A Cade, Brian E %A Campbell, Archie %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Charumathi, Sabanayagam %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Christensen, Kaare %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Connell, John M %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A de Silva, H Janaka %A de Vries, Paul S %A Doumatey, Ayo %A Duan, Qing %A Eaton, Charles B %A Eppinga, Ruben N %A Faul, Jessica D %A Floyd, James S %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Forrester, Terrence %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gandin, Ilaria %A Gao, He %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Gharib, Sina A %A Gigante, Bruna %A Giulianini, Franco %A Grabe, Hans J %A Gu, C Charles %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hirata, Makoto %A Hixson, James E %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jia, Yucheng %A Joehanes, Roby %A Johnson, Craig %A Jonas, Jost Bruno %A Justice, Anne E %A Katsuya, Tomohiro %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Lakka, Timo A %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lewis, Cora E %A Li, Yize %A Liang, Jingjing %A Lin, Shiow %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Jianjun %A Liu, Kiang %A Loh, Marie %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Louie, Tin %A Luzzi, Anna %A Mägi, Reedik %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Manichaikul, Ani W %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Milani, Lili %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Momozawa, Yukihide %A Morris, Andrew P %A Murray, Alison D %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nelson, Christopher P %A North, Kari E %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Papanicolau, George J %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Poulter, Neil %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reiner, Alex P %A Renstrom, Frida %A Rice, Treva K %A Rich, Stephen S %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Rudan, Igor %A Schmidt, Carsten O %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Scott, William R %A Sever, Peter %A Shi, Yuan %A Sidney, Stephen %A Sims, Mario %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Stringham, Heather M %A Tan, Nicholas Y Q %A Tang, Hua %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teo, Yik Ying %A Tham, Yih Chung %A Tiemeier, Henning %A Turner, Stephen T %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Heemst, Diana %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Heming %A Wang, Lan %A Wang, Lihua %A Wei, Wen Bin %A Williams, Christine A %A Wilson, Gregory %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Yao, Jie %A Young, Kristin %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhou, Jie %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bowden, Donald W %A Chambers, John C %A Cooper, Richard S %A de Faire, Ulf %A Deary, Ian J %A Elliott, Paul %A Esko, Tõnu %A Farrall, Martin %A Franks, Paul W %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Juang, Jyh-Ming Jimmy %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kammerer, Candace M %A Kato, Norihiro %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Laakso, Markku %A Laurie, Cathy C %A Lee, I-Te %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Redline, Susan %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Scott, James %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wang, Jun-Sing %A Wang, Ya Xing %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Watkins, Hugh %A Weir, David R %A Wickremasinghe, Ananda R %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zeggini, Eleftheria %A Zheng, Wei %A Bouchard, Claude %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Liu, Yongmei %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A van Dam, Rob M %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Fornage, Myriam %A Province, Michael A %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Fox, Ervin R %A Hayward, Caroline %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Tai, E Shyong %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Franceschini, Nora %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Bierut, Laura J %A Gauderman, W James %A Rice, Kenneth %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Cupples, L Adrienne %X

The concentrations of high- and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides are influenced by smoking, but it is unknown whether genetic associations with lipids may be modified by smoking. We conducted a multi-ancestry genome-wide gene-smoking interaction study in 133,805 individuals with follow-up in an additional 253,467 individuals. Combined meta-analyses identified 13 new loci associated with lipids, some of which were detected only because association differed by smoking status. Additionally, we demonstrate the importance of including diverse populations, particularly in studies of interactions with lifestyle factors, where genomic and lifestyle differences by ancestry may contribute to novel findings.

%B Nat Genet %V 51 %P 636-648 %8 2019 Apr %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1038/s41588-019-0378-y %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2019 %T Multi-ancestry sleep-by-SNP interaction analysis in 126,926 individuals reveals lipid loci stratified by sleep duration. %A Noordam, Raymond %A Bos, Maxime M %A Wang, Heming %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Bentley, Amy R %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A de Vries, Paul S %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Schwander, Karen %A Cade, Brian E %A Manning, Alisa %A Aschard, Hugues %A Brown, Michael R %A Chen, Han %A Franceschini, Nora %A Musani, Solomon K %A Richard, Melissa %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Bartz, Traci M %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A Feitosa, Mary %A Horimoto, Andrea R %A Ilkov, Marjan %A Kho, Minjung %A Kraja, Aldi %A Li, Changwei %A Lim, Elise %A Liu, Yongmei %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A van der Spek, Ashley %A Wang, Zhe %A Marten, Jonathan %A Laville, Vincent %A Alver, Maris %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Graff, Maria E %A He, Meian %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A Snieder, Harold %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Adolfo, Correa %A Ballantyne, Christie %A Bielak, Larry %A Biermasz, Nienke R %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Dimou, Niki %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Gao, Chuan %A Gharib, Sina A %A Gottlieb, Daniel J %A Haba-Rubio, José %A Harris, Tamara B %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heinzer, Raphael %A Hixson, James E %A Homuth, Georg %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Krieger, Jose E %A Lee, Jiwon %A Liu, Jingmin %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Luik, Annemarie I %A Mägi, Reedik %A Martin, Lisa W %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Nalls, Mike A %A O'Connell, Jeff %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Reiner, Alex P %A Rensen, Patrick C N %A Rice, Treva K %A Rich, Stephen S %A Roenneberg, Till %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Shikany, James %A Sidney, Stephen S %A Sims, Mario %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Sofer, Tamar %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Swertz, Morris A %A Taylor, Kent D %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Völzke, Henry %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wallance, Robert B %A van Dijk, Ko Willems %A Yu, Caizheng %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Elliott, Paul %A Esko, Tõnu %A Gieger, Christian %A Grabe, Hans J %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A North, Kari E %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wu, Tangchun %A Xiang, Yong-Bing %A Zheng, Wei %A Arnett, Donna K %A Bouchard, Claude %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Kardia, Sharon %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Province, Mike %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rotimi, Charles %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Amin, Najaf %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Fornage, Myriam %A Fox, Ervin F %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Gauderman, W James %A Rice, Kenneth %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A van Heemst, Diana %A Redline, Susan %X

Both short and long sleep are associated with an adverse lipid profile, likely through different biological pathways. To elucidate the biology of sleep-associated adverse lipid profile, we conduct multi-ancestry genome-wide sleep-SNP interaction analyses on three lipid traits (HDL-c, LDL-c and triglycerides). In the total study sample (discovery + replication) of 126,926 individuals from 5 different ancestry groups, when considering either long or short total sleep time interactions in joint analyses, we identify 49 previously unreported lipid loci, and 10 additional previously unreported lipid loci in a restricted sample of European-ancestry cohorts. In addition, we identify new gene-sleep interactions for known lipid loci such as LPL and PCSK9. The previously unreported lipid loci have a modest explained variance in lipid levels: most notable, gene-short-sleep interactions explain 4.25% of the variance in triglyceride level. Collectively, these findings contribute to our understanding of the biological mechanisms involved in sleep-associated adverse lipid profiles.

%B Nat Commun %V 10 %P 5121 %8 2019 Nov 12 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-019-12958-0 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Commun %D 2019 %T Multi-ancestry study of blood lipid levels identifies four loci interacting with physical activity. %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Bentley, Amy R %A Noordam, Raymond %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Schwander, Karen %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Jakupović, Hermina %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Manning, Alisa %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Aschard, Hugues %A Brown, Michael R %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A Franceschini, Nora %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Kho, Minjung %A Musani, Solomon K %A Richard, Melissa %A Wang, Heming %A Wang, Zhe %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Campbell, Archie %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Fisher, Virginia %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Li, Changwei %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Marten, Jonathan %A Sim, Xueling %A Smith, Albert V %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Alver, Maris %A Amini, Marzyeh %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Divers, Jasmin %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Gao, Chuan %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Harris, Sarah E %A He, Meian %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Jackson, Anne U %A Zhao, Jing Hua %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Laguzzi, Federica %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rueedi, Rico %A Stringham, Heather M %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A van der Most, Peter J %A Varga, Tibor V %A Verweij, Niek %A Ware, Erin B %A Wen, Wanqing %A Li, Xiaoyin %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Amin, Najaf %A Arnett, Donna K %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brumat, Marco %A Cade, Brian %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Connell, John %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Silva, H Janaka %A de Vries, Paul S %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Ding, Jingzhong %A Eaton, Charles B %A Faul, Jessica D %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gabriel, Kelley P %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Giulianini, Franco %A Gu, Chi Charles %A Gu, Dongfeng %A Harris, Tamara B %A He, Jiang %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hunt, Steven C %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jonas, Jost B %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Krieger, Jose E %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Kuusisto, Johanna %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Leander, Karin %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Lewis, Cora E %A Liang, Jingjing %A Liu, Jianjun %A Mägi, Reedik %A Manichaikul, Ani %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mosley, Thomas H %A Murray, Alison D %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nang, Ei-Ei Khaing %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Nona, Sotoodehnia %A Norris, Jill M %A Nwuba, Chiamaka Vivian %A O'Connell, Jeff %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Papanicolau, George J %A Pazoki, Raha %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Porteous, David J %A Poveda, Alaitz %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rich, Stephen S %A Risch, Neil %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rudan, Igor %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Scott, Robert A %A Sidney, Stephen S %A Sims, Mario %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Snieder, Harold %A Sofer, Tamar %A Starr, John M %A Sternfeld, Barbara %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tang, Hua %A Taylor, Kent D %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Tuomilehto, Jaakko %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van der Ende, M Yldau %A van Heemst, Diana %A Voortman, Trudy %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wennberg, Patrik %A Wilson, Gregory %A Xiang, Yong-Bing %A Yao, Jie %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhao, Wei %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Boehnke, Michael %A Bowden, Donald W %A de Faire, Ulf %A Deary, Ian J %A Elliott, Paul %A Esko, Tõnu %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Kato, Norihiro %A Laakso, Markku %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, Jana V %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wang, Ya X %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Weir, David R %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zheng, Wei %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Evans, Michele K %A Franks, Paul W %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hayward, Caroline %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Liu, Yongmei %A North, Kari E %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Ridker, Paul M %A Tai, E Shyong %A van Dam, Rob M %A Fox, Ervin R %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Province, Michael A %A Redline, Susan %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kooperberg, Charles B %A Gauderman, W James %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rice, Kenneth %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Fornage, Myriam %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Loos, Ruth J F %K Adolescent %K Adult %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Asian Continental Ancestry Group %K Brazil %K Calcium-Binding Proteins %K Cholesterol %K Cholesterol, HDL %K Cholesterol, LDL %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Exercise %K Female %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Genotype %K Hispanic Americans %K Humans %K LIM-Homeodomain Proteins %K Lipid Metabolism %K Lipids %K Male %K Membrane Proteins %K Microtubule-Associated Proteins %K Middle Aged %K Muscle Proteins %K Nerve Tissue Proteins %K Transcription Factors %K Triglycerides %K Young Adult %X

Many genetic loci affect circulating lipid levels, but it remains unknown whether lifestyle factors, such as physical activity, modify these genetic effects. To identify lipid loci interacting with physical activity, we performed genome-wide analyses of circulating HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglyceride levels in up to 120,979 individuals of European, African, Asian, Hispanic, and Brazilian ancestry, with follow-up of suggestive associations in an additional 131,012 individuals. We find four loci, in/near CLASP1, LHX1, SNTA1, and CNTNAP2, that are associated with circulating lipid levels through interaction with physical activity; higher levels of physical activity enhance the HDL cholesterol-increasing effects of the CLASP1, LHX1, and SNTA1 loci and attenuate the LDL cholesterol-increasing effect of the CNTNAP2 locus. The CLASP1, LHX1, and SNTA1 regions harbor genes linked to muscle function and lipid metabolism. Our results elucidate the role of physical activity interactions in the genetic contribution to blood lipid levels.

%B Nat Commun %V 10 %P 376 %8 2019 01 22 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1038/s41467-018-08008-w %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2019 %T Target genes, variants, tissues and transcriptional pathways influencing human serum urate levels. %A Tin, Adrienne %A Marten, Jonathan %A Halperin Kuhns, Victoria L %A Li, Yong %A Wuttke, Matthias %A Kirsten, Holger %A Sieber, Karsten B %A Qiu, Chengxiang %A Gorski, Mathias %A Yu, Zhi %A Giri, Ayush %A Sveinbjornsson, Gardar %A Li, Man %A Chu, Audrey Y %A Hoppmann, Anselm %A O'Connor, Luke J %A Prins, Bram %A Nutile, Teresa %A Noce, Damia %A Akiyama, Masato %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Ghasemi, Sahar %A van der Most, Peter J %A Horn, Katrin %A Xu, Yizhe %A Fuchsberger, Christian %A Sedaghat, Sanaz %A Afaq, Saima %A Amin, Najaf %A Arnlöv, Johan %A Bakker, Stephan J L %A Bansal, Nisha %A Baptista, Daniela %A Bergmann, Sven %A Biggs, Mary L %A Biino, Ginevra %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bottinger, Erwin P %A Boutin, Thibaud S %A Brumat, Marco %A Burkhardt, Ralph %A Campana, Eric %A Campbell, Archie %A Campbell, Harry %A Carroll, Robert J %A Catamo, Eulalia %A Chambers, John C %A Ciullo, Marina %A Concas, Maria Pina %A Coresh, Josef %A Corre, Tanguy %A Cusi, Daniele %A Felicita, Sala Cinzia %A de Borst, Martin H %A De Grandi, Alessandro %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Vries, Aiko P J %A Delgado, Graciela %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Devuyst, Olivier %A Dittrich, Katalin %A Eckardt, Kai-Uwe %A Ehret, Georg %A Endlich, Karlhans %A Evans, Michele K %A Gansevoort, Ron T %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Giedraitis, Vilmantas %A Gieger, Christian %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Gögele, Martin %A Gordon, Scott D %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Haller, Toomas %A Hamet, Pavel %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hayward, Caroline %A Hicks, Andrew A %A Hofer, Edith %A Holm, Hilma %A Huang, Wei %A Hutri-Kähönen, Nina %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Lewis, Raychel M %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Jakobsdottir, Johanna %A Jonsdottir, Ingileif %A Jonsson, Helgi %A Joshi, Peter K %A Josyula, Navya Shilpa %A Jung, Bettina %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kamatani, Yoichiro %A Kanai, Masahiro %A Kerr, Shona M %A Kiess, Wieland %A Kleber, Marcus E %A Koenig, Wolfgang %A Kooner, Jaspal S %A Körner, Antje %A Kovacs, Peter %A Krämer, Bernhard K %A Kronenberg, Florian %A Kubo, Michiaki %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A La Bianca, Martina %A Lange, Leslie A %A Lehne, Benjamin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Liu, Jun %A Loeffler, Markus %A Loos, Ruth J F %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Mägi, Reedik %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Martin, Nicholas G %A März, Winfried %A Mascalzoni, Deborah %A Matsuda, Koichi %A Meisinger, Christa %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Wilson, Otis D %A Gaziano, J Michael %A Mishra, Pashupati P %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Mononen, Nina %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Müller-Nurasyid, Martina %A Nadkarni, Girish N %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nikus, Kjell %A Ning, Boting %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Noordam, Raymond %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Olafsson, Isleifur %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Perls, Thomas %A Peters, Annette %A Pirastu, Mario %A Pirastu, Nicola %A Pistis, Giorgio %A Polasek, Ozren %A Ponte, Belen %A Porteous, David J %A Poulain, Tanja %A Preuss, Michael H %A Rabelink, Ton J %A Raffield, Laura M %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rettig, Rainer %A Rheinberger, Myriam %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Rizzi, Federica %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rudan, Igor %A Krajcoviechova, Alena %A Cifkova, Renata %A Rueedi, Rico %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Ryan, Kathleen A %A Saba, Yasaman %A Salvi, Erika %A Schmidt, Helena %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Shaffer, Christian M %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Blair H %A Spracklen, Cassandra N %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Stumvoll, Michael %A Sulem, Patrick %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Teren, Andrej %A Thiery, Joachim %A Thio, Chris H L %A Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Tönjes, Anke %A Tremblay, Johanne %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaccargiu, Simona %A van der Harst, Pim %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Verweij, Niek %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Waeber, Gérard %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Whitfield, John B %A Wild, Sarah H %A Wilson, James F %A Yang, Qiong %A Zhang, Weihua %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Bochud, Murielle %A Wilson, James G %A Pendergrass, Sarah A %A Ho, Kevin %A Parsa, Afshin %A Pramstaller, Peter P %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Böger, Carsten A %A Snieder, Harold %A Butterworth, Adam S %A Okada, Yukinori %A Edwards, Todd L %A Stefansson, Kari %A Susztak, Katalin %A Scholz, Markus %A Heid, Iris M %A Hung, Adriana M %A Teumer, Alexander %A Pattaro, Cristian %A Woodward, Owen M %A Vitart, Veronique %A Köttgen, Anna %X

Elevated serum urate levels cause gout and correlate with cardiometabolic diseases via poorly understood mechanisms. We performed a trans-ancestry genome-wide association study of serum urate in 457,690 individuals, identifying 183 loci (147 previously unknown) that improve the prediction of gout in an independent cohort of 334,880 individuals. Serum urate showed significant genetic correlations with many cardiometabolic traits, with genetic causality analyses supporting a substantial role for pleiotropy. Enrichment analysis, fine-mapping of urate-associated loci and colocalization with gene expression in 47 tissues implicated the kidney and liver as the main target organs and prioritized potentially causal genes and variants, including the transcriptional master regulators in the liver and kidney, HNF1A and HNF4A. Experimental validation showed that HNF4A transactivated the promoter of ABCG2, encoding a major urate transporter, in kidney cells, and that HNF4A p.Thr139Ile is a functional variant. Transcriptional coregulation within and across organs may be a general mechanism underlying the observed pleiotropy between urate and cardiometabolic traits.

%B Nat Genet %V 51 %P 1459-1474 %8 2019 Oct %G eng %N 10 %R 10.1038/s41588-019-0504-x %0 Journal Article %J Mol Psychiatry %D 2020 %T Gene-educational attainment interactions in a multi-ancestry genome-wide meta-analysis identify novel blood pressure loci. %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Noordam, Raymond %A Winkler, Thomas %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Schwander, Karen %A Bentley, Amy R %A Brown, Michael R %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Manning, Alisa %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Campbell, Archie %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Horimoto, A R V R %A Li, Changwei %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Liu, Yongmei %A Marten, Jonathan %A Musani, Solomon K %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Richard, Melissa %A Sim, Xueling %A Smith, Albert V %A Tajuddin, Salman M %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Warren, Helen R %A Xuan, Deng %A Alver, Maris %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Chai, Jin-Fang %A Chen, Xu %A Christensen, Kaare %A Divers, Jasmin %A Evangelou, Evangelos %A Gao, Chuan %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Harris, Sarah E %A He, Meian %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Laguzzi, Federica %A Li, Xiaoyin %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Poveda, Alaitz %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Rueedi, Rico %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A Snieder, Harold %A Sofer, Tamar %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Verweij, Niek %A Ware, Erin B %A Weiss, Stefan %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Amin, Najaf %A Arking, Dan E %A Arnett, Donna K %A Bergmann, Sven %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Brumat, Marco %A Burke, Gregory %A Cabrera, Claudia P %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chee, Miao Li %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Cocca, Massimiliano %A Connell, John %A de Silva, H Janaka %A de Vries, Paul S %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Faul, Jessica D %A Fisher, Virginia %A Forrester, Terrence %A Fox, Ervin F %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Gao, He %A Gigante, Bruna %A Giulianini, Franco %A Gu, Chi Charles %A Gu, Dongfeng %A Harris, Tamara B %A He, Jiang %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Hunt, Steven %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Irvin, Marguerite R %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Kraja, Aldi T %A Krieger, J E %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Li, Yize %A Liang, Jingjing %A Liewald, David C M %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Liu, Jianjun %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Mägi, Reedik %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Milani, Lili %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Nalls, Mike A %A Nelson, Christopher P %A Norris, Jill M %A O'Connell, Jeff %A Ogunniyi, Adesola %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Perls, Thomas %A Peters, Annette %A Petersmann, Astrid %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Polasek, Ozren %A Porteous, David J %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Rice, Treva K %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Rudan, Igor %A Rueda-Ochoa, Oscar-Leonel %A Sabanayagam, Charumathi %A Salako, Babatunde L %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Shikany, James M %A Sidney, Stephen S %A Sims, Mario %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Swertz, Morris A %A Teumer, Alexander %A Tham, Yih Chung %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vaidya, Dhananjay %A van der Ende, M Yldau %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Lihua %A Wang, Ya-Xing %A Wei, Wen-Bin %A Weir, David R %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yao, Jie %A Yu, Bing %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhao, Wei %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Bowden, Donald W %A Deary, Ian J %A Dörr, Marcus %A Esko, Tõnu %A Freedman, Barry I %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gasparini, Paolo %A Gieger, Christian %A Jonas, Jost Bruno %A Kammerer, Candace M %A Kato, Norihiro %A Lakka, Timo A %A Leander, Karin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Marques-Vidal, Pedro %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Samani, Nilesh J %A van der Harst, Pim %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zheng, Wei %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Bouchard, Claude %A Cooper, Richard S %A Correa, Adolfo %A Evans, Michele K %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hayward, Caroline %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Kritchevsky, Stephen B %A Levy, Daniel %A Palmas, Walter R %A Pereira, A C %A Province, Michael M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rotimi, Charles N %A Tai, E Shyong %A van Dam, Rob M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Rice, Kenneth %A Gauderman, W James %A Morrison, Alanna C %A North, Kari E %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Caulfield, Mark J %A Elliott, Paul %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Franks, Paul W %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Fornage, Myriam %X

Educational attainment is widely used as a surrogate for socioeconomic status (SES). Low SES is a risk factor for hypertension and high blood pressure (BP). To identify novel BP loci, we performed multi-ancestry meta-analyses accounting for gene-educational attainment interactions using two variables, "Some College" (yes/no) and "Graduated College" (yes/no). Interactions were evaluated using both a 1 degree of freedom (DF) interaction term and a 2DF joint test of genetic and interaction effects. Analyses were performed for systolic BP, diastolic BP, mean arterial pressure, and pulse pressure. We pursued genome-wide interrogation in Stage 1 studies (N = 117 438) and follow-up on promising variants in Stage 2 studies (N = 293 787) in five ancestry groups. Through combined meta-analyses of Stages 1 and 2, we identified 84 known and 18 novel BP loci at genome-wide significance level (P < 5 × 10). Two novel loci were identified based on the 1DF test of interaction with educational attainment, while the remaining 16 loci were identified through the 2DF joint test of genetic and interaction effects. Ten novel loci were identified in individuals of African ancestry. Several novel loci show strong biological plausibility since they involve physiologic systems implicated in BP regulation. They include genes involved in the central nervous system-adrenal signaling axis (ZDHHC17, CADPS, PIK3C2G), vascular structure and function (GNB3, CDON), and renal function (HAS2 and HAS2-AS1, SLIT3). Collectively, these findings suggest a role of educational attainment or SES in further dissection of the genetic architecture of BP.

%B Mol Psychiatry %8 2020 May 05 %G eng %R 10.1038/s41380-020-0719-3 %0 Journal Article %J PLoS One %D 2020 %T Genetic loci associated with prevalent and incident myocardial infarction and coronary heart disease in the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium. %A Hahn, Julie %A Fu, Yi-Ping %A Brown, Michael R %A Bis, Joshua C %A de Vries, Paul S %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Weiss, Stefan %A Giulianini, Franco %A Smith, Albert Vernon %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Bartz, Traci M %A Becker, Diane M %A Becker, Lewis C %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Franco, Oscar H %A Grove, Megan %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hofman, Albert %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Kral, Brian G %A Launer, Lenore J %A Markus, Marcello R P %A Rice, Kenneth M %A Rich, Stephen S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Rivadeneira, Fernando %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Taylor, Kent D %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Völker, Uwe %A Völzke, Henry %A Yao, Jie %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Dörr, Marcus %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Mathias, Rasika A %A Post, Wendy %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Dehghan, Abbas %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Morrison, Alanna C %K Aging %K Coronary Artery Disease %K Cross-Sectional Studies %K Europe %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Genetic Loci %K Genome-Wide Association Study %K Humans %K Myocardial Infarction %K Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide %K Prospective Studies %X

BACKGROUND: Genome-wide association studies have identified multiple genomic loci associated with coronary artery disease, but most are common variants in non-coding regions that provide limited information on causal genes and etiology of the disease. To overcome the limited scope that common variants provide, we focused our investigation on low-frequency and rare sequence variations primarily residing in coding regions of the genome.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Using samples of individuals of European ancestry from ten cohorts within the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium, both cross-sectional and prospective analyses were conducted to examine associations between genetic variants and myocardial infarction (MI), coronary heart disease (CHD), and all-cause mortality following these events. For prevalent events, a total of 27,349 participants of European ancestry, including 1831 prevalent MI cases and 2518 prevalent CHD cases were used. For incident cases, a total of 55,736 participants of European ancestry were included (3,031 incident MI cases and 5,425 incident CHD cases). There were 1,860 all-cause deaths among the 3,751 MI and CHD cases from six cohorts that contributed to the analysis of all-cause mortality. Single variant and gene-based analyses were performed separately in each cohort and then meta-analyzed for each outcome. A low-frequency intronic variant (rs988583) in PLCL1 was significantly associated with prevalent MI (OR = 1.80, 95% confidence interval: 1.43, 2.27; P = 7.12 × 10-7). We conducted gene-based burden tests for genes with a cumulative minor allele count (cMAC) ≥ 5 and variants with minor allele frequency (MAF) < 5%. TMPRSS5 and LDLRAD1 were significantly associated with prevalent MI and CHD, respectively, and RC3H2 and ANGPTL4 were significantly associated with incident MI and CHD, respectively. No loci were significantly associated with all-cause mortality following a MI or CHD event.

CONCLUSION: This study identified one known locus (ANGPTL4) and four new loci (PLCL1, RC3H2, TMPRSS5, and LDLRAD1) associated with cardiovascular disease risk that warrant further investigation.

%B PLoS One %V 15 %P e0230035 %8 2020 %G eng %N 11 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0230035 %0 Journal Article %J Diabetes %D 2020 %T Genetic Studies of Leptin Concentrations Implicate Leptin in the Regulation of Early Adiposity. %A Yaghootkar, Hanieh %A Zhang, Yiying %A Spracklen, Cassandra N %A Karaderi, Tugce %A Huang, Lam Opal %A Bradfield, Jonathan %A Schurmann, Claudia %A Fine, Rebecca S %A Preuss, Michael H %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A Wittemans, Laura Bl %A Lu, Yingchang %A Metz, Sophia %A Willems, Sara M %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Grarup, Niels %A Wang, Shuai %A Molnos, Sophie %A Sandoval-Zárate, América A %A Nalls, Mike A %A Lange, Leslie A %A Haesser, Jeffrey %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Sitlani, Colleen M %A Venturini, Cristina %A Mahajan, Anubha %A Kacprowski, Tim %A Wang, Carol A %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Amin, Najaf %A Broer, Linda %A Robertson, Neil %A Young, Kristin L %A Allison, Matthew %A Auer, Paul L %A Blüher, Matthias %A Borja, Judith B %A Bork-Jensen, Jette %A Carrasquilla, Germán D %A Christofidou, Paraskevi %A Demirkan, Ayse %A Doege, Claudia A %A Garcia, Melissa E %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Guo, Kaiying %A Hakonarson, Hakon %A Hong, Jaeyoung %A Ida Chen, Yii-Der %A Jackson, Rebecca %A Jakupović, Hermina %A Jousilahti, Pekka %A Justice, Anne E %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kizer, Jorge R %A Kriebel, Jennifer %A LeDuc, Charles A %A Li, Jin %A Lind, Lars %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mackey, David %A Mangino, Massimo %A Männistö, Satu %A Martin Carli, Jayne F %A Medina-Gómez, Carolina %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Morris, Andrew P %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nedeljkovic, Ivana %A Pennell, Craig E %A Pradhan, Arund D %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Scott, Robert A %A Skaaby, Tea %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Taylor, Kent D %A Teumer, Alexander %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Wu, Ying %A Yao, Jie %A Walker, Mark %A North, Kari E %A Kovacs, Peter %A Ikram, M Arfan %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Ridker, Paul M %A Lye, Stephen %A Homuth, Georg %A Ingelsson, Erik %A Spector, Tim D %A McKnight, Barbara %A Province, Michael A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Adair, Linda S %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Reiner, Alexander P %A Wilson, James G %A Harris, Tamara B %A Ripatti, Samuli %A Grallert, Harald %A Meigs, James B %A Salomaa, Veikko %A Hansen, Torben %A Willems van Dijk, Ko %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Grant, Struan Fa %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Lindgren, Cecilia M %A Mohlke, Karen L %A Leibel, Rudolph L %A Loos, Ruth Jf %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %X

Leptin influences food intake by informing the brain about the status of body fat stores. Rare mutations associated with congenital leptin deficiency cause severe early-onset obesity that can be mitigated by administering leptin. However, the role of genetic regulation of leptin in polygenic obesity remains poorly understood. We performed an exome-based analysis in up to 57,232 individuals of diverse ancestries to identify genetic variants that influence adiposity-adjusted leptin concentrations. We identify five novel variants, including four missense variants, in , and , and one intergenic variant near The missense variant Val94Met (rs17151919) in was common in individuals of African ancestry only and its association with lower leptin concentrations was specific to this ancestry (P=2x10, n=3,901). Using analyses, we show that the Met94 allele decreases leptin secretion. We also show that the Met94 allele is associated with higher BMI in young African-ancestry children but not in adults, suggesting leptin regulates early adiposity.

%B Diabetes %8 2020 Sep 11 %G eng %R 10.2337/db20-0070 %0 Journal Article %J Nature %D 2021 %T Genetic insights into biological mechanisms governing human ovarian ageing. %A Ruth, Katherine S %A Day, Felix R %A Hussain, Jazib %A Martínez-Marchal, Ana %A Aiken, Catherine E %A Azad, Ajuna %A Thompson, Deborah J %A Knoblochova, Lucie %A Abe, Hironori %A Tarry-Adkins, Jane L %A Gonzalez, Javier Martin %A Fontanillas, Pierre %A Claringbould, Annique %A Bakker, Olivier B %A Sulem, Patrick %A Walters, Robin G %A Terao, Chikashi %A Turon, Sandra %A Horikoshi, Momoko %A Lin, Kuang %A Onland-Moret, N Charlotte %A Sankar, Aditya %A Hertz, Emil Peter Thrane %A Timshel, Pascal N %A Shukla, Vallari %A Borup, Rehannah %A Olsen, Kristina W %A Aguilera, Paula %A Ferrer-Roda, Mònica %A Huang, Yan %A Stankovic, Stasa %A Timmers, Paul R H J %A Ahearn, Thomas U %A Alizadeh, Behrooz Z %A Naderi, Elnaz %A Andrulis, Irene L %A Arnold, Alice M %A Aronson, Kristan J %A Augustinsson, Annelie %A Bandinelli, Stefania %A Barbieri, Caterina M %A Beaumont, Robin N %A Becher, Heiko %A Beckmann, Matthias W %A Benonisdottir, Stefania %A Bergmann, Sven %A Bochud, Murielle %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Bojesen, Stig E %A Bolla, Manjeet K %A Boomsma, Dorret I %A Bowker, Nicholas %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Broer, Linda %A Buring, Julie E %A Campbell, Archie %A Campbell, Harry %A Castelao, Jose E %A Catamo, Eulalia %A Chanock, Stephen J %A Chenevix-Trench, Georgia %A Ciullo, Marina %A Corre, Tanguy %A Couch, Fergus J %A Cox, Angela %A Crisponi, Laura %A Cross, Simon S %A Cucca, Francesco %A Czene, Kamila %A Smith, George Davey %A de Geus, Eco J C N %A de Mutsert, Renée %A De Vivo, Immaculata %A Demerath, Ellen W %A Dennis, Joe %A Dunning, Alison M %A Dwek, Miriam %A Eriksson, Mikael %A Esko, Tõnu %A Fasching, Peter A %A Faul, Jessica D %A Ferrucci, Luigi %A Franceschini, Nora %A Frayling, Timothy M %A Gago-Dominguez, Manuela %A Mezzavilla, Massimo %A García-Closas, Montserrat %A Gieger, Christian %A Giles, Graham G %A Grallert, Harald %A Gudbjartsson, Daniel F %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Guénel, Pascal %A Haiman, Christopher A %A Håkansson, Niclas %A Hall, Per %A Hayward, Caroline %A He, Chunyan %A He, Wei %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Høffding, Miya K %A Hopper, John L %A Hottenga, Jouke J %A Hu, Frank %A Hunter, David %A Ikram, Mohammad A %A Jackson, Rebecca D %A Joaquim, Micaella D R %A John, Esther M %A Joshi, Peter K %A Karasik, David %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kartsonaki, Christiana %A Karlsson, Robert %A Kitahara, Cari M %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Kraft, Peter %A Kurian, Allison W %A Kutalik, Zoltán %A La Bianca, Martina %A Lachance, Genevieve %A Langenberg, Claudia %A Launer, Lenore J %A Laven, Joop S E %A Lawlor, Deborah A %A Le Marchand, Loïc %A Li, Jingmei %A Lindblom, Annika %A Lindström, Sara %A Lindstrom, Tricia %A Linet, Martha %A Liu, Yongmei %A Liu, Simin %A Luan, Jian'an %A Mägi, Reedik %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A Mangino, Massimo %A Mannermaa, Arto %A Marco, Brumat %A Marten, Jonathan %A Martin, Nicholas G %A Mbarek, Hamdi %A McKnight, Barbara %A Medland, Sarah E %A Meisinger, Christa %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Menni, Cristina %A Metspalu, Andres %A Milani, Lili %A Milne, Roger L %A Montgomery, Grant W %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Mulas, Antonella %A Mulligan, Anna M %A Murray, Alison %A Nalls, Mike A %A Newman, Anne %A Noordam, Raymond %A Nutile, Teresa %A Nyholt, Dale R %A Olshan, Andrew F %A Olsson, Håkan %A Painter, Jodie N %A Patel, Alpa V %A Pedersen, Nancy L %A Perjakova, Natalia %A Peters, Annette %A Peters, Ulrike %A Pharoah, Paul D P %A Polasek, Ozren %A Porcu, Eleonora %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rahman, Iffat %A Rennert, Gad %A Rennert, Hedy S %A Ridker, Paul M %A Ring, Susan M %A Robino, Antonietta %A Rose, Lynda M %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Rossouw, Jacques %A Rudan, Igor %A Rueedi, Rico %A Ruggiero, Daniela %A Sala, Cinzia F %A Saloustros, Emmanouil %A Sandler, Dale P %A Sanna, Serena %A Sawyer, Elinor J %A Sarnowski, Chloe %A Schlessinger, David %A Schmidt, Marjanka K %A Schoemaker, Minouk J %A Schraut, Katharina E %A Scott, Christopher %A Shekari, Saleh %A Shrikhande, Amruta %A Smith, Albert V %A Smith, Blair H %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Sorice, Rossella %A Southey, Melissa C %A Spector, Tim D %A Spinelli, John J %A Stampfer, Meir %A Stöckl, Doris %A van Meurs, Joyce B J %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Styrkarsdottir, Unnur %A Swerdlow, Anthony J %A Tanaka, Toshiko %A Teras, Lauren R %A Teumer, Alexander %A Þorsteinsdottir, Unnur %A Timpson, Nicholas J %A Toniolo, Daniela %A Traglia, Michela %A Troester, Melissa A %A Truong, Thérèse %A Tyrrell, Jessica %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Ulivi, Sheila %A Vachon, Celine M %A Vitart, Veronique %A Völker, Uwe %A Vollenweider, Peter %A Völzke, Henry %A Wang, Qin %A Wareham, Nicholas J %A Weinberg, Clarice R %A Weir, David R %A Wilcox, Amber N %A van Dijk, Ko Willems %A Willemsen, Gonneke %A Wilson, James F %A Wolffenbuttel, Bruce H R %A Wolk, Alicja %A Wood, Andrew R %A Zhao, Wei %A Zygmunt, Marek %A Chen, Zhengming %A Li, Liming %A Franke, Lude %A Burgess, Stephen %A Deelen, Patrick %A Pers, Tune H %A Grøndahl, Marie Louise %A Andersen, Claus Yding %A Pujol, Anna %A Lopez-Contreras, Andres J %A Daniel, Jeremy A %A Stefansson, Kari %A Chang-Claude, Jenny %A van der Schouw, Yvonne T %A Lunetta, Kathryn L %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Easton, Douglas F %A Visser, Jenny A %A Ozanne, Susan E %A Namekawa, Satoshi H %A Solc, Petr %A Murabito, Joanne M %A Ong, Ken K %A Hoffmann, Eva R %A Murray, Anna %A Roig, Ignasi %A Perry, John R B %X

Reproductive longevity is essential for fertility and influences healthy ageing in women, but insights into its underlying biological mechanisms and treatments to preserve it are limited. Here we identify 290 genetic determinants of ovarian ageing, assessed using normal variation in age at natural menopause (ANM) in about 200,000 women of European ancestry. These common alleles were associated with clinical extremes of ANM; women in the top 1% of genetic susceptibility have an equivalent risk of premature ovarian insufficiency to those carrying monogenic FMR1 premutations. The identified loci implicate a broad range of DNA damage response (DDR) processes and include loss-of-function variants in key DDR-associated genes. Integration with experimental models demonstrates that these DDR processes act across the life-course to shape the ovarian reserve and its rate of depletion. Furthermore, we demonstrate that experimental manipulation of DDR pathways highlighted by human genetics increases fertility and extends reproductive life in mice. Causal inference analyses using the identified genetic variants indicate that extending reproductive life in women improves bone health and reduces risk of type 2 diabetes, but increases the risk of hormone-sensitive cancers. These findings provide insight into the mechanisms that govern ovarian ageing, when they act, and how they might be targeted by therapeutic approaches to extend fertility and prevent disease.

%B Nature %V 596 %P 393-397 %8 2021 Aug %G eng %N 7872 %R 10.1038/s41586-021-03779-7 %0 Journal Article %J HGG Adv %D 2021 %T Multi-Ancestry Genome-wide Association Study Accounting for Gene-Psychosocial Factor Interactions Identifies Novel Loci for Blood Pressure Traits. %A Sun, Daokun %A Richard, Melissa %A Musani, Solomon K %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Schwander, Karen %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Aschard, Hugues %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Brown, Michael R %A Chitrala, Kumaraswamy %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Horimoto, Andrea R V R %A Liu, Yongmei %A Manning, Alisa K %A Noordam, Raymond %A Smith, Albert V %A Harris, Sarah E %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A van der Most, Peter J %A Wang, Rujia %A Ware, Erin B %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Arking, Dan E %A Arnett, Donna K %A Barac, Ana %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Chakravarti, Aravinda %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A Davigulus, Martha L %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Vries, Paul S %A Delaney, Joseph A C %A Roux, Ana V Diez %A Dörr, Marcus %A Faul, Jessica D %A Fretts, Amanda M %A Gallo, Linda C %A Grabe, Hans Jörgen %A Gu, C Charles %A Harris, Tamara B %A Hartman, Catharina C A %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Isasi, Carmen %A Johnson, W Craig %A Jonas, Jost Bruno %A Kaplan, Robert C %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Krieger, Jose E %A Levy, Daniel %A Liu, Jianjun %A Lohman, Kurt %A Luik, Annemarie I %A Martin, Lisa W %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A O'Connell, Jeff R %A Palmas, Walter R %A Peters, Annette %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Pulkki-Råback, Laura %A Raffel, Leslie J %A Reiner, Alex P %A Rice, Kenneth %A Robinson, Jennifer G %A Rosendaal, Frits R %A Schmidt, Carsten Oliver %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Schwettmann, Lars %A Shikany, James M %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A Sidney, Stephen %A Sims, Mario %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Sotoodehnia, Nona %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tai, E Shyong %A Taylor, Kent %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wee, Hwee-Lin %A Wei, Wen-Bin %A Wilson, Gregory %A Xuan, Deng %A Yao, Jie %A Zeng, Donglin %A Zhao, Wei %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Becker, Diane M %A Deary, Ian J %A Gieger, Christian %A Lakka, Timo A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A North, Kari E %A Oldehinkel, Albertine J %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Snieder, Harold %A Wang, Ya-Xing %A Weir, David R %A Zheng, Wei %A Evans, Michele K %A Gauderman, W James %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Amin, Najaf %A Fox, Ervin R %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Sim, Xueling %A Bierut, Laura %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Franceschini, Nora %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Fornage, Myriam %X

Psychological and social factors are known to influence blood pressure (BP) and risk of hypertension and associated cardiovascular diseases. To identify novel BP loci, we carried out genome-wide association meta-analyses of systolic, diastolic, pulse, and mean arterial BP taking into account the interaction effects of genetic variants with three psychosocial factors: depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and social support. Analyses were performed using a two-stage design in a sample of up to 128,894 adults from 5 ancestry groups. In the combined meta-analyses of Stages 1 and 2, we identified 59 loci (p value <5e-8), including nine novel BP loci. The novel associations were observed mostly with pulse pressure, with fewer observed with mean arterial pressure. Five novel loci were identified in African ancestry, and all but one showed patterns of interaction with at least one psychosocial factor. Functional annotation of the novel loci supports a major role for genes implicated in the immune response (), synaptic function and neurotransmission (), as well as genes previously implicated in neuropsychiatric or stress-related disorders (). These findings underscore the importance of considering psychological and social factors in gene discovery for BP, especially in non-European populations.

%B HGG Adv %V 2 %8 2021 Jan 14 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1016/j.xhgg.2020.100013 %0 Journal Article %J Mol Psychiatry %D 2021 %T Multi-ancestry genome-wide gene-sleep interactions identify novel loci for blood pressure. %A Wang, Heming %A Noordam, Raymond %A Cade, Brian E %A Schwander, Karen %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Lee, Jiwon %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Bentley, Amy R %A Manning, Alisa K %A Aschard, Hugues %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Ilkov, Marjan %A Brown, Michael R %A Horimoto, Andrea R %A Richard, Melissa %A Bartz, Traci M %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Lim, Elise %A Nierenberg, Jovia L %A Liu, Yongmei %A Chitrala, Kumaraswamynaidu %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Musani, Solomon K %A Franceschini, Nora %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Alver, Maris %A Zee, Phyllis C %A Harris, Sarah E %A van der Most, Peter J %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Hall, Kelly A %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A O'Connell, Jeff %A Eiriksdottir, Gudny %A Launer, Lenore J %A de Vries, Paul S %A Arking, Dan E %A Chen, Han %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Krieger, Jose E %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Sidney, Stephen %A Shikany, James M %A Rice, Kenneth %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Gharib, Sina A %A Bis, Joshua C %A Luik, Annemarie I %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Amin, Najaf %A Xu, Hanfei %A Levy, Daniel %A He, Jiang %A Lohman, Kurt K %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Rice, Treva K %A Sims, Mario %A Wilson, Gregory %A Sofer, Tamar %A Rich, Stephen S %A Palmas, Walter %A Yao, Jie %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Biermasz, Nienke R %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Martin, Lisa W %A Barac, Ana %A Wallace, Robert B %A Gottlieb, Daniel J %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Mägi, Reedik %A Milani, Lili %A Metspalu, Andres %A Starr, John M %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Waken, R J %A Gao, Chuan %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Peters, Annette %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Roenneberg, Till %A Völker, Uwe %A Dörr, Marcus %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A Mukherjee, Sutapa %A Hillman, David R %A Kähönen, Mika %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Gieger, Christian %A Grabe, Hans J %A Zheng, Wei %A Palmer, Lyle J %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Fornage, Myriam %A Psaty, Bruce M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Kelly, Tanika N %A Evans, Michele K %A Bouchard, Claude %A Fox, Ervin R %A Kooperberg, Charles %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Lakka, Timo A %A Esko, Tõnu %A North, Kari E %A Deary, Ian J %A Snieder, Harold %A Penninx, Brenda W J H %A Gauderman, W James %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Redline, Susan %A van Heemst, Diana %X

Long and short sleep duration are associated with elevated blood pressure (BP), possibly through effects on molecular pathways that influence neuroendocrine and vascular systems. To gain new insights into the genetic basis of sleep-related BP variation, we performed genome-wide gene by short or long sleep duration interaction analyses on four BP traits (systolic BP, diastolic BP, mean arterial pressure, and pulse pressure) across five ancestry groups in two stages using 2 degree of freedom (df) joint test followed by 1df test of interaction effects. Primary multi-ancestry analysis in 62,969 individuals in stage 1 identified three novel gene by sleep interactions that were replicated in an additional 59,296 individuals in stage 2 (stage 1 + 2 P < 5 × 10), including rs7955964 (FIGNL2/ANKRD33) that increases BP among long sleepers, and rs73493041 (SNORA26/C9orf170) and rs10406644 (KCTD15/LSM14A) that increase BP among short sleepers (P < 5 × 10). Secondary ancestry-specific analysis identified another novel gene by long sleep interaction at rs111887471 (TRPC3/KIAA1109) in individuals of African ancestry (P = 2 × 10). Combined stage 1 and 2 analyses additionally identified significant gene by long sleep interactions at 10 loci including MKLN1 and RGL3/ELAVL3 previously associated with BP, and significant gene by short sleep interactions at 10 loci including C2orf43 previously associated with BP (P < 10). 2df test also identified novel loci for BP after modeling sleep that has known functions in sleep-wake regulation, nervous and cardiometabolic systems. This study indicates that sleep and primary mechanisms regulating BP may interact to elevate BP level, suggesting novel insights into sleep-related BP regulation.

%B Mol Psychiatry %8 2021 Apr 15 %G eng %R 10.1038/s41380-021-01087-0 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Genom Precis Med %D 2021 %T Multiethnic Genome-Wide Association Study of Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes. %A Lu, Yingchang %A Dimitrov, Latchezar %A Chen, Shyh-Huei %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Bis, Joshua C %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Lu, Lingyi %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Raffield, Laura M %A Smith, Albert V %A Wang, Lihua %A Weiss, Stefan %A Yao, Jie %A Zhu, Jiaxi %A Gudmundsson, Elias F %A Gudmundsdottir, Valborg %A Bos, Daniel %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Taylor, Kent D %A Budoff, Matthew J %A Gislason, Gauti K %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A An, Ping %A Franceschini, Nora %A Freedman, Barry I %A Fu, Yi-Ping %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Heiss, Gerardo %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Wilson, James G %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Schminke, Ulf %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Lange, Leslie A %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Gudnason, Vilmundur G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Bowden, Donald W %A Ng, Maggie C Y %X

BACKGROUND: Coronary artery calcification (CAC) and carotid artery intima-media thickness (cIMT) are measures of subclinical atherosclerosis in asymptomatic individuals and strong risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is an independent cardiovascular disease risk factor that accelerates atherosclerosis.

METHODS: We performed meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies in up to 2500 T2D individuals of European ancestry (EA) and 1590 T2D individuals of African ancestry with or without exclusion of prevalent cardiovascular disease, for CAC measured by cardiac computed tomography, and 3608 individuals of EA and 838 individuals of African ancestry with T2D for cIMT measured by ultrasonography within the CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology) Consortium.

RESULTS: We replicated 2 loci (rs9369640 and rs9349379 near and rs10757278 near ) for CAC and one locus for cIMT (rs7412 and rs445925 near ) that were previously reported in the general EA populations. We identified one novel CAC locus (rs8000449 near at 13q13.3) at =2.0×10 in EA. No additional loci were identified with the meta-analyses of EA and African ancestry. The expression quantitative trait loci analysis with nearby expressed genes derived from arterial wall and metabolic tissues from the Genotype-Tissue Expression project pinpoints , encoding a matricellular protein involved in bone formation and bone matrix organization, as the potential candidate gene at this locus. In addition, we found significant associations (<3.1×10) for 3 previously reported coronary artery disease loci for these subclinical atherosclerotic phenotypes (rs2891168 near and rs11170820 near for CAC, and rs7412 near for cIMT).

CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide potential biological mechanisms that could link CAC and cIMT to increased cardiovascular disease risk in individuals with T2D.

%B Circ Genom Precis Med %V 14 %P e003258 %8 2021 Aug %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1161/CIRCGEN.120.003258 %0 Journal Article %J Circ Genom Precis Med %D 2021 %T Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption May Modify Associations Between Genetic Variants in the CHREBP (Carbohydrate Responsive Element Binding Protein) Locus and HDL-C (High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol) and Triglyceride Concentrations. %A Haslam, Danielle E %A Peloso, Gina M %A Guirette, Melanie %A Imamura, Fumiaki %A Bartz, Traci M %A Pitsillides, Achilleas N %A Wang, Carol A %A Li-Gao, Ruifang %A Westra, Jason M %A Pitkänen, Niina %A Young, Kristin L %A Graff, Mariaelisa %A Wood, Alexis C %A Braun, Kim V E %A Luan, Jian'an %A Kähönen, Mika %A Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C %A Ghanbari, Mohsen %A Tintle, Nathan %A Lemaitre, Rozenn N %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A North, Kari %A Helminen, Mika %A Mossavar-Rahmani, Yasmin %A Snetselaar, Linda %A Martin, Lisa W %A Viikari, Jorma S %A Oddy, Wendy H %A Pennell, Craig E %A Rosendall, Frits R %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Mozaffarian, Dariush %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Taylor, Kent D %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Livingston, Kara A %A Voortman, Trudy %A Forouhi, Nita G %A Wareham, Nick J %A de Mutsert, Renée %A Rich, Steven S %A Manson, JoAnn E %A Mora, Samia %A Ridker, Paul M %A Merino, Jordi %A Meigs, James B %A Dashti, Hassan S %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Lichtenstein, Alice H %A Smith, Caren E %A Dupuis, Josée %A Herman, Mark A %A McKeown, Nicola M %X

BACKGROUND: ChREBP (carbohydrate responsive element binding protein) is a transcription factor that responds to sugar consumption. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption and genetic variants in the locus have separately been linked to HDL-C (high-density lipoprotein cholesterol) and triglyceride concentrations. We hypothesized that SSB consumption would modify the association between genetic variants in the locus and dyslipidemia.

METHODS: Data from 11 cohorts from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium (N=63 599) and the UK Biobank (N=59 220) were used to quantify associations of SSB consumption, genetic variants, and their interaction on HDL-C and triglyceride concentrations using linear regression models. A total of 1606 single nucleotide polymorphisms within or near were considered. SSB consumption was estimated from validated questionnaires, and participants were grouped by their estimated intake.

RESULTS: In a meta-analysis, rs71556729 was significantly associated with higher HDL-C concentrations only among the highest SSB consumers (β, 2.12 [95% CI, 1.16-3.07] mg/dL per allele; <0.0001), but not significantly among the lowest SSB consumers (=0.81; <0.0001). Similar results were observed for 2 additional variants (rs35709627 and rs71556736). For triglyceride, rs55673514 was positively associated with triglyceride concentrations only among the highest SSB consumers (β, 0.06 [95% CI, 0.02-0.09] ln-mg/dL per allele, =0.001) but not the lowest SSB consumers (=0.84; =0.0005).

CONCLUSIONS: Our results identified genetic variants in the locus that may protect against SSB-associated reductions in HDL-C and other variants that may exacerbate SSB-associated increases in triglyceride concentrations. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT00005133, NCT00005121, NCT00005487, and NCT00000479.

%B Circ Genom Precis Med %V 14 %P e003288 %8 2021 Aug %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1161/CIRCGEN.120.003288 %0 Journal Article %J Hum Mol Genet %D 2022 %T Whole exome sequencing of 14 389 individuals from the ESP and CHARGE consortia identifies novel rare variation associated with hemostatic factors. %A Pankratz, Nathan %A Wei, Peng %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Chen, Ming-Huei %A Vries, Paul S %A Huffman, Jennifer E %A Stimson, Mary Rachel %A Auer, Paul L %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Cushman, Mary %A Maat, Moniek P M %A Folsom, Aaron R %A Franco, Oscar H %A Gibbs, Richard A %A Haagenson, Kelly K %A Hofman, Albert %A Johnsen, Jill M %A Kovar, Christie L %A Kraaij, Robert %A McKnight, Barbara %A Metcalf, Ginger A %A Muzny, Donna %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Tang, Weihong %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Rooij, Jeroen G J %A Dehghan, Abbas %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Reiner, Alex P %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Smith, Nicholas L %X

Plasma levels of fibrinogen, coagulation factors VII and VIII, and von Willebrand factor (vWF) are four intermediate phenotypes that are heritable and have been associated with the risk of clinical thrombotic events. To identify rare and low-frequency variants associated with these hemostatic factors, we conducted whole exome sequencing in 10 860 individuals of European ancestry (EA) and 3529 African Americans (AAs) from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Exome Sequencing Project (ESP). Gene-based tests demonstrated significant associations with rare variation (minor allele frequency < 5%) in FGG (with fibrinogen, p = 9.1x10-13), F7 (with factor VII, p = 1.3x10-72; seven novel variants), and VWF (with factor VIII and vWF; p = 3.2x10-14; one novel variant). These eight novel rare variant associations were independent of the known common variants at these loci and tended to have much larger effect sizes. In addition, one of the rare novel variants in F7 was significantly associated with an increased risk of venous thromboembolism in AAs (Ile200Ser; rs141219108; p = 4.2x10-5). After restricting gene-based analyses to only loss-of-function variants, a novel significant association was detected and replicated between factor VIII levels and a stop-gain mutation exclusive to African Americans (rs3211938) in CD36. This variant has previously been linked to dyslipidemia but not with levels of a hemostatic factor. These efforts represent the largest integration of whole exome sequence data from two national projects to identify genetic variation associated with plasma hemostatic factors.

%B Hum Mol Genet %8 2022 May 12 %G eng %R 10.1093/hmg/ddac100 %0 Journal Article %J Front Genet %D 2023 %T Gene-educational attainment interactions in a multi-population genome-wide meta-analysis identify novel lipid loci. %A de Las Fuentes, Lisa %A Schwander, Karen L %A Brown, Michael R %A Bentley, Amy R %A Winkler, Thomas W %A Sung, Yun Ju %A Munroe, Patricia B %A Miller, Clint L %A Aschard, Hugo %A Aslibekyan, Stella %A Bartz, Traci M %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Chai, Jin Fang %A Cheng, Ching-Yu %A Dorajoo, Rajkumar %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hartwig, Fernando P %A Horimoto, Andrea %A Kolcic, Ivana %A Lim, Elise %A Liu, Yongmei %A Manning, Alisa K %A Marten, Jonathan %A Musani, Solomon K %A Noordam, Raymond %A Padmanabhan, Sandosh %A Rankinen, Tuomo %A Richard, Melissa A %A Ridker, Paul M %A Smith, Albert V %A Vojinovic, Dina %A Zonderman, Alan B %A Alver, Maris %A Boissel, Mathilde %A Christensen, Kaare %A Freedman, Barry I %A Gao, Chuan %A Giulianini, Franco %A Harris, Sarah E %A He, Meian %A Hsu, Fang-Chi %A Kuhnel, Brigitte %A Laguzzi, Federica %A Li, Xiaoyin %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Nolte, Ilja M %A Poveda, Alaitz %A Rauramaa, Rainer %A Riaz, Muhammad %A Robino, Antonietta %A Sofer, Tamar %A Takeuchi, Fumihiko %A Tayo, Bamidele O %A van der Most, Peter J %A Verweij, Niek %A Ware, Erin B %A Weiss, Stefan %A Wen, Wanqing %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Zhan, Yiqiang %A Amin, Najaf %A Arking, Dan E %A Ballantyne, Christie %A Boerwinkle, Eric %A Brody, Jennifer A %A Broeckel, Ulrich %A Campbell, Archie %A Canouil, Mickaël %A Chai, Xiaoran %A Chen, Yii-Der Ida %A Chen, Xu %A Chitrala, Kumaraswamy Naidu %A Concas, Maria Pina %A de Faire, Ulf %A de Mutsert, Renée %A de Silva, H Janaka %A de Vries, Paul S %A Do, Ahn %A Faul, Jessica D %A Fisher, Virginia %A Floyd, James S %A Forrester, Terrence %A Friedlander, Yechiel %A Girotto, Giorgia %A Gu, C Charles %A Hallmans, Göran %A Heikkinen, Sami %A Heng, Chew-Kiat %A Homuth, Georg %A Hunt, Steven %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Jacobs, David R %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Khor, Chiea Chuen %A Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O %A Koh, Woon-Puay %A Komulainen, Pirjo %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Liang, Jingjing %A Liu, Kiang %A Liu, Jianjun %A Lohman, Kurt %A Mägi, Reedik %A Manichaikul, Ani W %A McKenzie, Colin A %A Meitinger, Thomas %A Milaneschi, Yuri %A Nauck, Matthias %A Nelson, Christopher P %A O'Connell, Jeffrey R %A Palmer, Nicholette D %A Pereira, Alexandre C %A Perls, Thomas %A Peters, Annette %A Polasek, Ozren %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Rice, Kenneth %A Rice, Treva K %A Rich, Stephen S %A Sabanayagam, Charumathi %A Schreiner, Pamela J %A Shu, Xiao-Ou %A Sidney, Stephen %A Sims, Mario %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Starr, John M %A Strauch, Konstantin %A Tai, E Shyong %A Taylor, Kent D %A Tsai, Michael Y %A Uitterlinden, André G %A van Heemst, Diana %A Waldenberger, Melanie %A Wang, Ya-Xing %A Wei, Wen-Bin %A Wilson, Gregory %A Xuan, Deng %A Yao, Jie %A Yu, Caizheng %A Yuan, Jian-Min %A Zhao, Wei %A Becker, Diane M %A Bonnefond, Amélie %A Bowden, Donald W %A Cooper, Richard S %A Deary, Ian J %A Divers, Jasmin %A Esko, Tõnu %A Franks, Paul W %A Froguel, Philippe %A Gieger, Christian %A Jonas, Jost B %A Kato, Norihiro %A Lakka, Timo A %A Leander, Karin %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Magnusson, Patrik K E %A North, Kari E %A Ntalla, Ioanna %A Penninx, Brenda %A Samani, Nilesh J %A Snieder, Harold %A Spedicati, Beatrice %A van der Harst, Pim %A Völzke, Henry %A Wagenknecht, Lynne E %A Weir, David R %A Wojczynski, Mary K %A Wu, Tangchun %A Zheng, Wei %A Zhu, Xiaofeng %A Bouchard, Claude %A Chasman, Daniel I %A Evans, Michele K %A Fox, Ervin R %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hayward, Caroline %A Horta, Bernardo L %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Krieger, Jose Eduardo %A Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Province, Michael M %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Rudan, Igor %A Sim, Xueling %A Smith, Blair H %A van Dam, Rob M %A van Duijn, Cornelia M %A Wong, Tien Yin %A Arnett, Donna K %A Rao, Dabeeru C %A Gauderman, James %A Liu, Ching-Ti %A Morrison, Alanna C %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Fornage, Myriam %X

Educational attainment, widely used in epidemiologic studies as a surrogate for socioeconomic status, is a predictor of cardiovascular health outcomes. A two-stage genome-wide meta-analysis of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL), and triglyceride (TG) levels was performed while accounting for gene-educational attainment interactions in up to 226,315 individuals from five population groups. We considered two educational attainment variables: "Some College" (yes/no, for any education beyond high school) and "Graduated College" (yes/no, for completing a 4-year college degree). Genome-wide significant ( < 5 × 10) and suggestive ( < 1 × 10) variants were identified in Stage 1 (in up to 108,784 individuals) through genome-wide analysis, and those variants were followed up in Stage 2 studies (in up to 117,531 individuals). In combined analysis of Stages 1 and 2, we identified 18 novel lipid loci (nine for LDL, seven for HDL, and two for TG) by two degree-of-freedom (2 DF) joint tests of main and interaction effects. Four loci showed significant interaction with educational attainment. Two loci were significant only in cross-population analyses. Several loci include genes with known or suggested roles in adipose (), brain (), and liver () biology, highlighting the potential importance of brain-adipose-liver communication in the regulation of lipid metabolism. An investigation of the potential druggability of genes in identified loci resulted in five gene targets shown to interact with drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration, including genes with roles in adipose and brain tissue. Genome-wide interaction analysis of educational attainment identified novel lipid loci not previously detected by analyses limited to main genetic effects.

%B Front Genet %V 14 %P 1235337 %8 2023 %G eng %R 10.3389/fgene.2023.1235337 %0 Journal Article %J Nat Genet %D 2023 %T Multi-ancestry genome-wide study identifies effector genes and druggable pathways for coronary artery calcification. %A Kavousi, Maryam %A Bos, Maxime M %A Barnes, Hanna J %A Lino Cardenas, Christian L %A Wong, Doris %A Lu, Haojie %A Hodonsky, Chani J %A Landsmeer, Lennart P L %A Turner, Adam W %A Kho, Minjung %A Hasbani, Natalie R %A de Vries, Paul S %A Bowden, Donald W %A Chopade, Sandesh %A Deelen, Joris %A Benavente, Ernest Diez %A Guo, Xiuqing %A Hofer, Edith %A Hwang, Shih-Jen %A Lutz, Sharon M %A Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka %A Slenders, Lotte %A Smith, Albert V %A Stanislawski, Maggie A %A van Setten, Jessica %A Wong, Quenna %A Yanek, Lisa R %A Becker, Diane M %A Beekman, Marian %A Budoff, Matthew J %A Feitosa, Mary F %A Finan, Chris %A Hilliard, Austin T %A Kardia, Sharon L R %A Kovacic, Jason C %A Kral, Brian G %A Langefeld, Carl D %A Launer, Lenore J %A Malik, Shaista %A Hoesein, Firdaus A A Mohamed %A Mokry, Michal %A Schmidt, Reinhold %A Smith, Jennifer A %A Taylor, Kent D %A Terry, James G %A van der Grond, Jeroen %A van Meurs, Joyce %A Vliegenthart, Rozemarijn %A Xu, Jianzhao %A Young, Kendra A %A Zilhão, Nuno R %A Zweiker, Robert %A Assimes, Themistocles L %A Becker, Lewis C %A Bos, Daniel %A Carr, J Jeffrey %A Cupples, L Adrienne %A de Kleijn, Dominique P V %A de Winther, Menno %A den Ruijter, Hester M %A Fornage, Myriam %A Freedman, Barry I %A Gudnason, Vilmundur %A Hingorani, Aroon D %A Hokanson, John E %A Ikram, M Arfan %A Išgum, Ivana %A Jacobs, David R %A Kähönen, Mika %A Lange, Leslie A %A Lehtimäki, Terho %A Pasterkamp, Gerard %A Raitakari, Olli T %A Schmidt, Helena %A Slagboom, P Eline %A Uitterlinden, André G %A Vernooij, Meike W %A Bis, Joshua C %A Franceschini, Nora %A Psaty, Bruce M %A Post, Wendy S %A Rotter, Jerome I %A Björkegren, Johan L M %A O'Donnell, Christopher J %A Bielak, Lawrence F %A Peyser, Patricia A %A Malhotra, Rajeev %A van der Laan, Sander W %A Miller, Clint L %X

Coronary artery calcification (CAC), a measure of subclinical atherosclerosis, predicts future symptomatic coronary artery disease (CAD). Identifying genetic risk factors for CAC may point to new therapeutic avenues for prevention. Currently, there are only four known risk loci for CAC identified from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in the general population. Here we conducted the largest multi-ancestry GWAS meta-analysis of CAC to date, which comprised 26,909 individuals of European ancestry and 8,867 individuals of African ancestry. We identified 11 independent risk loci, of which eight were new for CAC and five had not been reported for CAD. These new CAC loci are related to bone mineralization, phosphate catabolism and hormone metabolic pathways. Several new loci harbor candidate causal genes supported by multiple lines of functional evidence and are regulators of smooth muscle cell-mediated calcification ex vivo and in vitro. Together, these findings help refine the genetic architecture of CAC and extend our understanding of the biological and potential druggable pathways underlying CAC.

%B Nat Genet %V 55 %P 1651-1664 %8 2023 Oct %G eng %N 10 %R 10.1038/s41588-023-01518-4