Cross-ancestry genome-wide analysis of atrial fibrillation unveils disease biology and enables cardioembolic risk prediction

Author:

Miyazawa Kazuo,Ito KaoruORCID,Ito Masamichi,Zou ZhaonanORCID,Kubota Masayuki,Nomura SeitaroORCID,Matsunaga Hiroshi,Koyama Satoshi,Ieki HirotakaORCID,Akiyama Masato,Koike YoshinaoORCID,Kurosawa Ryo,Yoshida Hiroki,Ozaki KouichiORCID,Onouchi YoshihiroORCID,Matsuda Koichi,Murakami Yoshinori,Kamatani Yoichiro,Takahashi Atsushi,Matsuda Koichi,Murakami YoshinoriORCID,Aburatani HiroyukiORCID,Kubo Michiaki,Momozawa YukihideORCID,Terao ChikashiORCID,Oki ShinyaORCID,Akazawa Hiroshi,Kamatani YoichiroORCID,Komuro IsseiORCID,

Abstract

AbstractAtrial fibrillation (AF) is a common cardiac arrhythmia resulting in increased risk of stroke. Despite highly heritable etiology, our understanding of the genetic architecture of AF remains incomplete. Here we performed a genome-wide association study in the Japanese population comprising 9,826 cases among 150,272 individuals and identified East Asian-specific rare variants associated with AF. A cross-ancestry meta-analysis of >1 million individuals, including 77,690 cases, identified 35 new susceptibility loci. Transcriptome-wide association analysis identified IL6R as a putative causal gene, suggesting the involvement of immune responses. Integrative analysis with ChIP-seq data and functional assessment using human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes demonstrated ERRg as having a key role in the transcriptional regulation of AF-associated genes. A polygenic risk score derived from the cross-ancestry meta-analysis predicted increased risks of cardiovascular and stroke mortalities and segregated individuals with cardioembolic stroke in undiagnosed AF patients. Our results provide new biological and clinical insights into AF genetics and suggest their potential for clinical applications.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

MEXT | RIKEN

MSD Life Science Foundation

Sakakibara Memorial Research Grant for the Japan Research Promotion Society for Cardiovascular Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics

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