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Fine mapping the

Authors :
Elisabeth M, van Leeuwen
Jennifer E, Huffman
Joshua C, Bis
Aaron, Isaacs
Monique, Mulder
Aniko, Sabo
Albert V, Smith
Serkalem, Demissie
Ani, Manichaikul
Jennifer A, Brody
Mary F, Feitosa
Qing, Duan
Katharina E, Schraut
Pau, Navarro
Jana V, van Vliet-Ostaptchouk
Gu, Zhu
Hamdi, Mbarek
Stella, Trompet
Niek, Verweij
Leo-Pekka, Lyytikäinen
Joris, Deelen
Ilja M, Nolte
Sander W, van der Laan
Gail, Davies
Andrea Jm, Vermeij-Verdoold
Andy Alj, van Oosterhout
Jeannette M, Vergeer-Drop
Dan E, Arking
Holly, Trochet
Carolina, Medina-Gomez
Fernando, Rivadeneira
Andre G, Uitterlinden
Abbas, Dehghan
Oscar H, Franco
Eric J, Sijbrands
Albert, Hofman
Charles C, White
Josyf C, Mychaleckyj
Gina M, Peloso
Morris A, Swertz
Gonneke, Willemsen
Eco J, de Geus
Yuri, Milaneschi
Brenda Wjh, Penninx
Ian, Ford
Brendan M, Buckley
Anton Jm, de Craen
John M, Starr
Ian J, Deary
Gerard, Pasterkamp
Albertine J, Oldehinkel
Harold, Snieder
P Eline, Slagboom
Kjell, Nikus
Mika, Kähönen
Terho, Lehtimäki
Jorma S, Viikari
Olli T, Raitakari
Pim, van der Harst
J Wouter, Jukema
Jouke-Jan, Hottenga
Dorret I, Boomsma
John B, Whitfield
Grant, Montgomery
Nicholas G, Martin
Ozren, Polasek
Veronique, Vitart
Caroline, Hayward
Ivana, Kolcic
Alan F, Wright
Igor, Rudan
Peter K, Joshi
James F, Wilson
Leslie A, Lange
James G, Wilson
Vilmundur, Gudnason
Tamar B, Harris
Alanna C, Morrison
Ingrid B, Borecki
Stephen S, Rich
Sandosh, Padmanabhan
Bruce M, Psaty
Jerome I, Rotter
Blair H, Smith
Eric, Boerwinkle
L Adrienne, Cupples
Cornelia, van Duijn
Source :
NPJ Aging and Mechanisms of Disease
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Individuals with exceptional longevity and their offspring have significantly larger high-density lipoprotein concentrations (HDL-C) particle sizes due to the increased homozygosity for the I405V variant in the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) gene. In this study, we investigate the association of CETP and HDL-C further to identify novel, independent CETP variants associated with HDL-C in humans. Methods: We performed a meta-analysis of HDL-C within the CETP region using 59,432 individuals imputed with 1000 Genomes data. We performed replication in an independent sample of 47,866 individuals and validation was done by Sanger sequencing. Results: The meta-analysis of HDL-C within the CETP region identified five independent variants, including an exonic variant and a common intronic insertion. We replicated these 5 variants significantly in an independent sample of 47,866 individuals. Sanger sequencing of the insertion within a single family confirmed segregation of this variant. The strongest reported association between HDL-C and CETP variants, was rs3764261; however, after conditioning on the five novel variants we identified the support for rs3764261 was highly reduced (βunadjusted=3.179 mg/dl (P value=5.25×10−509), βadjusted=0.859 mg/dl (P value=9.51×10−25)), and this finding suggests that these five novel variants may partly explain the association of CETP with HDL-C. Indeed, three of the five novel variants (rs34065661, rs5817082, rs7499892) are independent of rs3764261. Conclusions: The causal variants in CETP that account for the association with HDL-C remain unknown. We used studies imputed to the 1000 Genomes reference panel for fine mapping of the CETP region. We identified and validated five variants within this region that may partly account for the association of the known variant (rs3764261), as well as other sources of genetic contribution to HDL-C.

Details

ISSN :
20563973
Volume :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NPJ aging and mechanisms of disease
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........3f903a70e6cbc0d9dbe9643fe59580f3