An Exploration of Gene-Gene Interactions and Their Effects on Hypertension

Author:

Meng Ying1ORCID,Groth Susan1,Quinn Jill R.1,Bisognano John2,Wu Tong Tong3

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Cardiology Division, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USA

3. Department of Biostatistics and Computational Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

Abstract

Hypertension tends to perpetuate in families and the heritability of hypertension is estimated to be around 20–60%. So far, the main proportion of this heritability has not been found by single-locus genome-wide association studies. Therefore, the current study explored gene-gene interactions that have the potential to partially fill in the missing heritability. A two-stage discovery-confirmatory analysis was carried out in the Framingham Heart Study cohorts. The first stage was an exhaustive pairwise search performed in 2320 early-onset hypertensive cases with matched normotensive controls from the offspring cohort. Then, identified gene-gene interactions were assessed in an independent set of 694 subjects from the original cohort. Four unique gene-gene interactions were found to be related to hypertension. Three detected genes were recognized by previous studies, and the other 5 loci/genes (MAN1A1, LMO3, NPAP1/SNRPN, DNAL4, and RNA5SP455/KRT8P5) were novel findings, which had no strong main effect on hypertension and could not be easily identified by single-locus genome-wide studies. Also, by including the identified gene-gene interactions, more variance was explained in hypertension. Overall, our study provides evidence that the genome-wide gene-gene interaction analysis has the possibility to identify new susceptibility genes, which can provide more insights into the genetic background of blood pressure regulation.

Funder

Boston University

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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