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Genomewide association analysis of coronary artery disease

Authors :
Nilesh J. Samani
Jeanette Erdmann
Alistair S. Hall
Christian Hengstenberg
Massimo Mangino
Bjoern Mayer
Richard J. Dixon
Thomas Meitinger
Peter Braund
H.-Erich Wichmann
Jennifer H. Barrett
Inke R. König
Suzanne E. Stevens
Silke Szymczak
David-Alexandre Tregouet
Mark M. Iles
Friedrich Pahlke
Helen Pollard
Wolfgang Lieb
Francois Cambien
Marcus Fischer
Willem Ouwehand
Stefan Blankenberg
Anthony J. Balmforth
Andrea Baessler
Stephen G. Ball
Tim M. Strom
Ingrid Brænne
Christian Gieger
Panos Deloukas
Martin D. Tobin
Andreas Ziegler
John R. Thompson
Heribert Schunkert
Source :
The New England journal of medicine. 357(5)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Modern genotyping platforms permit a systematic search for inherited components of complex diseases. We performed a joint analysis of two genomewide association studies of coronary artery disease.We first identified chromosomal loci that were strongly associated with coronary artery disease in the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) study (which involved 1926 case subjects with coronary artery disease and 2938 controls) and looked for replication in the German MI [Myocardial Infarction] Family Study (which involved 875 case subjects with myocardial infarction and 1644 controls). Data on other single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that were significantly associated with coronary artery disease in either study (P0.001) were then combined to identify additional loci with a high probability of true association. Genotyping in both studies was performed with the use of the GeneChip Human Mapping 500K Array Set (Affymetrix).Of thousands of chromosomal loci studied, the same locus had the strongest association with coronary artery disease in both the WTCCC and the German studies: chromosome 9p21.3 (SNP, rs1333049) (P=1.80x10(-14) and P=3.40x10(-6), respectively). Overall, the WTCCC study revealed nine loci that were strongly associated with coronary artery disease (P1.2x10(-5) and less than a 50% chance of being falsely positive). In addition to chromosome 9p21.3, two of these loci were successfully replicated (adjusted P0.05) in the German study: chromosome 6q25.1 (rs6922269) and chromosome 2q36.3 (rs2943634). The combined analysis of the two studies identified four additional loci significantly associated with coronary artery disease (P1.3x10(-6)) and a high probability (80%) of a true association: chromosomes 1p13.3 (rs599839), 1q41 (rs17465637), 10q11.21 (rs501120), and 15q22.33 (rs17228212).We identified several genetic loci that, individually and in aggregate, substantially affect the risk of development of coronary artery disease.

Details

ISSN :
15334406
Volume :
357
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6cfe08c831d186f6eaaa38d0e3b5dfe