Genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function: a meta-analysis and replication of genome-wide association data.

Journal: Jama
Published:
Abstract

Background: 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.

Methods: 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. Methods: 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.

Authors
Ramachandran Vasan, Nicole Glazer, Janine Felix, Wolfgang Lieb, Philipp Wild, Stephan Felix, Norbert Watzinger, Martin Larson, Nicholas Smith, Abbas Dehghan, Anika Grosshennig, Arne Schillert, Alexander Teumer, Reinhold Schmidt, Sekar Kathiresan, Thomas Lumley, Yurii Aulchenko, Inke König, Tanja Zeller, Georg Homuth, Maksim Struchalin, Jayashri Aragam, Joshua Bis, Fernando Rivadeneira, Jeanette Erdmann, Renate Schnabel, Marcus Dörr, Robert Zweiker, Lars Lind, Richard Rodeheffer, Karin Greiser, Daniel Levy, Talin Haritunians, Jaap Deckers, Jan Stritzke, Karl Lackner, Uwe Völker, Erik Ingelsson, Iftikhar Kullo, Johannes Haerting, Christopher O'donnell, Susan Heckbert, Bruno Stricker, Andreas Ziegler, Thorsten Reffelmann, Margaret Redfield, Karl Werdan, Gary Mitchell, Kenneth Rice, Donna Arnett, Albert Hofman, John Gottdiener, Andre Uitterlinden, Thomas Meitinger, Maria Blettner, Nele Friedrich, Thomas Wang, Bruce Psaty, Cornelia Van Duijn, H-erich Wichmann, Thomas Munzel, Heyo Kroemer, Emelia Benjamin, Jerome Rotter, Jacqueline Witteman, Heribert Schunkert, Helena Schmidt, Henry Völzke, Stefan Blankenberg