Carriers of rare damagingCCR2genetic variants are at lower risk of atherosclerotic disease
Author:
Georgakis Marios K., Malik Rainer, Hasbani Natalie R., Shakt Gabrielle, Morrison Alanna C., Tsao Noah L.ORCID, Judy Renae, Mitchell Braxton D.ORCID, Xu HuichunORCID, Montasser May E., Do RonORCID, Kenny Eimear E., Loos Ruth J.F., Terry James G., Carr John JeffreyORCID, Bis Joshua C., Psaty Bruce M., Longstreth W. T., Young Kendra A, Lutz Sharon M, Cho Michael HORCID, Broome Jai, Khan Alyna T., Wang Fei Fei, Heard-Costa Nancy, Seshadri Sudha, Vasan Ramachandran S., Palmer Nicholette D., Freedman Barry I., Bowden Donald W., Yanek Lisa R.ORCID, Kral Brian G., Becker Lewis C., Peyser Patricia A., Bielak Lawrence F., Ammous Farah, Carson April P., Hall Michael E., Raffield Laura M., Rich Stephen S., Post Wendy S., Tracy Russel P., Taylor Kent D., Guo Xiuqing, Mahaney Michael C., Curran Joanne E., Blangero JohnORCID, Clarke Shoa L.ORCID, Haessler Jeffrey W., Hu Yao, Assimes Themistocles L.ORCID, Kooperberg Charles, Damrauer Scott M., Rotter Jerome I., de Vries Paul S., Dichgans Martin
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackgroundThe CCL2/CCR2 axis governs monocyte trafficking and recruitment to atherosclerotic lesions. Human genetic analyses and population-based studies support an association between circulating CCL2 levels and atherosclerosis. Still, it remains unknown whether pharmacological targeting of CCR2, the main CCL2 receptor, would provide protection against human atherosclerotic disease.MethodsIn whole-exome sequencing data from 454,775 UK Biobank participants (40-69 years), we identified predicted loss-of-function (LoF) or damaging missense (REVEL score >0.5) variants within theCCR2gene. We prioritized variants associated with lower monocyte count (p<0.05) and tested associations with vascular risk factors and risk of atherosclerotic disease over a mean follow-up of 14 years. The results were replicated in a pooled cohort of three independent datasets (TOPMed, deCODE and Penn Medicine BioBank; total n=441,445) and the effect of the most frequent damaging variant was experimentally validated.ResultsA total of 45 predicted LoF or damaging missense variants were identified in theCCR2gene, 4 of which were also significantly associated with lower monocyte count, but not with other white blood cell counts. Heterozygous carriers of these variants were at a lower risk of a combined atherosclerosis outcome, showed a lower burden of atherosclerosis across four vascular beds, and were at a lower lifetime risk of coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction. There was no evidence of association with vascular risk factors including LDL-cholesterol, blood pressure, glycemic status, or C-reactive protein. Using a cAMP assay, we found that cells transfected with the most frequentCCR2damaging variant (3:46358273:T:A, M249K, 547 carriers, frequency: 0.14%) show a decrease in signaling in response to CCL2. The associations of the M249K variant with myocardial infarction were consistent across cohorts (ORUKB: 0.62 95%CI: 0.39-0.96; ORexternal: 0.64 95%CI: 0.34-1.19; ORpooled: 0.64 95%CI: 0.45-0.90). In a phenome-wide association study, we found no evidence for higher risk of common infections or mortality among carriers of damagingCCR2variants.ConclusionsHeterozygous carriers of damagingCCR2variants have a lower burden of atherosclerosis and lower lifetime risk of myocardial infarction. In conjunction with previous evidence from experimental and epidemiological studies, our findings highlight the translational potential of CCR2-targeting as an atheroprotective approach.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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