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Runs of homozygosity – association with coronary artery disease and gene expression in monocytes and macrophages

journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-09, 13:45 authored by Paraskevi Christofidou, Christopher P. Nelson, M. Nikpay, L. Qu, M. Li, C. Loley, Radoslaw Debiec, Peter S. Braund, Matthew Denniff, F. J. Charchar, A. R. Arjo, D-A. Trégouët, Alison H. Goodall, F. Cambien, W. H. Ouwehand, R. Roberts, H. Schunkert, C. Hengstenberg, M. P. Reilly, J. Erdmann, R. McPherson, I. R. König, John R. Thompson, Nilesh J. Samani, Maciej Tomaszewski
Runs of homozygosity (ROHs) are recognised signature of recessive inheritance. Contributions of ROHs to the genetic architecture of coronary artery disease and regulation of gene expression in cells relevant to atherosclerosis are not known. Our combined analysis of 24,320 individuals from 11 populations of white European ethnicity showed an association between coronary artery disease and both the count and the size of ROHs. Individuals with coronary artery disease had approximately 0.63 (95% CI: 0.4-0.8) excess of ROHs when compared to coronary artery disease-free controls (P=1.49x10-9 ). The average total length of ROHs was approximately 1046.92 (95% CI: 634.4-1459.5) kb greater in individuals with coronary artery disease than controls (P=6.61x10-7 ). None of the identified individual ROHs was associated with coronary artery disease after correction for multiple testing. However, in aggregate burden analysis, ROHs favouring increased risk of coronary artery disease were much more common than those showing the opposite direction of association with coronary artery disease (P=2.69x10-33). Individual ROHs showed significant associations with monocyte and macrophage expression of genes in their close proximity – subjects with several individual ROHs showed significant differences in the expression of 44 mRNAs in monocytes and 17 mRNAs in macrophages when compared to subjects without those ROHs. This study provides evidence for an excess of homozygosity in coronary artery disease in outbred populations and suggest the potential biological relevance of ROHs in cells of importance to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.

Funding

This study was supported by the Alumni Association of University of Leicester PhD studentship and International Mentoring Travel Award by American Heart Association to PC. MT is supported by the British Heart Foundation. NJS holds a personal chair supported by the British Heart Foundation and is a UK NIHR senior investigator. CPN is funded by the British Heart Foundation. The Cardiogenics project was supported by the European Union 6th Framework Program (LSHM-CT-2006-037593). The UKBS collection of Common Controls has been funded by the Wellcome Trust grant 084183/Z/07/Z and by NIHR programme grant to NHSBT (RP-PG-0310-1002). The collection was established as part of the WTCCC.

History

Citation

American Journal of Human Genetics 97, 228–237, August 6, 2015

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Published in

American Journal of Human Genetics 97

Publisher

Elsevier (Cell Press)

issn

0002-9297

eissn

1537-6605

Acceptance date

2015-06-04

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2016-02-09

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002929715002372

Language

en

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    University of Leicester Publications

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