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Meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies in >80 000 subjects identifies multiple loci for C-reactive protein levels.

Authors :
Dehghan A
Dupuis J
Barbalic M
Bis JC
Eiriksdottir G
Lu C
Pellikka N
Wallaschofski H
Kettunen J
Henneman P
Baumert J
Strachan DP
Fuchsberger C
Vitart V
Wilson JF
Paré G
Naitza S
Rudock ME
Surakka I
de Geus EJ
Alizadeh BZ
Guralnik J
Shuldiner A
Tanaka T
Zee RY
Schnabel RB
Nambi V
Kavousi M
Ripatti S
Nauck M
Smith NL
Smith AV
Sundvall J
Scheet P
Liu Y
Ruokonen A
Rose LM
Larson MG
Hoogeveen RC
Freimer NB
Teumer A
Tracy RP
Launer LJ
Buring JE
Yamamoto JF
Folsom AR
Sijbrands EJ
Pankow J
Elliott P
Keaney JF
Sun W
Sarin AP
Fontes JD
Badola S
Astor BC
Hofman A
Pouta A
Werdan K
Greiser KH
Kuss O
Meyer zu Schwabedissen HE
Thiery J
Jamshidi Y
Nolte IM
Soranzo N
Spector TD
Völzke H
Parker AN
Aspelund T
Bates D
Young L
Tsui K
Siscovick DS
Guo X
Rotter JI
Uda M
Schlessinger D
Rudan I
Hicks AA
Penninx BW
Thorand B
Gieger C
Coresh J
Willemsen G
Harris TB
Uitterlinden AG
Järvelin MR
Rice K
Radke D
Salomaa V
Willems van Dijk K
Boerwinkle E
Vasan RS
Ferrucci L
Gibson QD
Bandinelli S
Snieder H
Boomsma DI
Xiao X
Campbell H
Hayward C
Pramstaller PP
van Duijn CM
Peltonen L
Psaty BM
Gudnason V
Ridker PM
Homuth G
Koenig W
Ballantyne CM
Witteman JC
Benjamin EJ
Perola M
Chasman DI
Source :
Circulation [Circulation] 2011 Feb 22; Vol. 123 (7), pp. 731-8. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Feb 07.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Background: C-reactive protein (CRP) is a heritable marker of chronic inflammation that is strongly associated with cardiovascular disease. We sought to identify genetic variants that are associated with CRP levels.<br />Methods and Results: We performed a genome-wide association analysis of CRP in 66 185 participants from 15 population-based studies. We sought replication for the genome-wide significant and suggestive loci in a replication panel comprising 16 540 individuals from 10 independent studies. We found 18 genome-wide significant loci, and we provided evidence of replication for 8 of them. Our results confirm 7 previously known loci and introduce 11 novel loci that are implicated in pathways related to the metabolic syndrome (APOC1, HNF1A, LEPR, GCKR, HNF4A, and PTPN2) or the immune system (CRP, IL6R, NLRP3, IL1F10, and IRF1) or that reside in regions previously not known to play a role in chronic inflammation (PPP1R3B, SALL1, PABPC4, ASCL1, RORA, and BCL7B). We found a significant interaction of body mass index with LEPR (P<2.9×10(-6)). A weighted genetic risk score that was developed to summarize the effect of risk alleles was strongly associated with CRP levels and explained ≈5% of the trait variance; however, there was no evidence for these genetic variants explaining the association of CRP with coronary heart disease.<br />Conclusions: We identified 18 loci that were associated with CRP levels. Our study highlights immune response and metabolic regulatory pathways involved in the regulation of chronic inflammation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1524-4539
Volume :
123
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Circulation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21300955
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.110.948570