Dense Genotyping of Candidate Gene Loci Identifies Variants Associated With High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol

Author:

Edmondson Andrew C.1,Braund Peter S.1,Stylianou Ioannis M.1,Khera Amit V.1,Nelson Christopher P.1,Wolfe Megan L.1,DerOhannessian Stephanie L.1,Keating Brendan J.1,Qu Liming1,He Jing1,Tobin Martin D.1,Tomaszewski Maciej1,Baumert Jens1,Klopp Norman1,Döring Angela1,Thorand Barbara1,Li Mingyao1,Reilly Muredach P.1,Koenig Wolfgang1,Samani Nilesh J.1,Rader Daniel J.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics (A.C.E., I.M.S., A.V.K., M.L.W., S.L.D., B.J.K., M.P.R., D.J.R.), Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology (L.Q., J.H., M.L.), and Cardiovascular Institute (M.P.R., D.J.R.), University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA; Department of Cardiovascular Sciences (P.S.B., C.P.N., M.T., N.J.S.) and Department of Health Sciences (M.D.T.), University of Leicester, Leicester, UK; Leicester NIHR Biomedical Research Unit in...

Abstract

Background— Plasma levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) are known to be heritable, but only a fraction of the heritability is explained. We used a high-density genotyping array containing single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from HDL-C candidate genes selected on known biology of HDL-C metabolism, mouse genetic studies, and human genetic association studies. SNP selection was based on tagging SNPs and included low-frequency nonsynonymous SNPs. Methods and Results— Association analysis in a cohort containing extremes of HDL-C (case-control, n=1733) provided a discovery phase, with replication in 3 additional populations for a total meta-analysis in 7857 individuals. We replicated the majority of loci identified through genome-wide association studies and present on the array (including ABCA1, APOA1/C3/A4/A5, APOB, APOE/C1/C2, CETP, CTCF-PRMT8, FADS1/2/3, GALNT2, LCAT, LILRA3, LIPC, LIPG, LPL, LRP4, SCARB1, TRIB1, ZNF664 ) and provide evidence that suggests an association in several previously unreported candidate gene loci (including ABCG1, GPR109A/B/81, NFKB1, PON1/2/3/4 ). There was evidence for multiple, independent association signals in 5 loci, including association with low-frequency nonsynonymous variants. Conclusions— Genetic loci associated with HDL-C are likely to harbor multiple, independent causative variants, frequently with opposite effects on the HDL-C phenotype. Cohorts comprising subjects at the extremes of the HDL-C distribution may be efficiently used in a case-control discovery of quantitative traits.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Genetics

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