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Genome-wide association study and meta-analysis identify loci associated with ventricular and supraventricular ectopy.

Citation
Napier, M. D., et al. “Genome-Wide Association Study And Meta-Analysis Identify Loci Associated With Ventricular And Supraventricular Ectopy.”. Scientific Reports, p. 5675.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Melanie D Napier, Nora Franceschini, Rahul Gondalia, James D Stewart, Raúl Méndez-Giráldez, Colleen M Sitlani, Amanda A Seyerle, Heather M Highland, Yun Li, Kirk C Wilhelmsen, Song Yan, Qing Duan, Jeffrey Roach, Jie Yao, Xiuqing Guo, Kent D Taylor, Susan R Heckbert, Jerome I Rotter, Kari E North, Alexander P Reiner, Zhu-Ming Zhang, Lesley F Tinker, Duanping Liao, Cathy C Laurie, Stephanie M Gogarten, Henry J Lin, Jennifer A Brody, Traci M Bartz, Bruce M Psaty, Nona Sotoodehnia, Elsayed Z Soliman, Christy L Avery, Eric A Whitsel
Abstract

The genetic basis of supraventricular and ventricular ectopy (SVE, VE) remains largely uncharacterized, despite established genetic mechanisms of arrhythmogenesis. To identify novel genetic variants associated with SVE/VE in ancestrally diverse human populations, we conducted a genome-wide association study of electrocardiographically identified SVE and VE in five cohorts including approximately 43,000 participants of African, European and Hispanic/Latino ancestry. In thirteen ancestry-stratified subgroups, we tested multivariable-adjusted associations of SVE and VE with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) dosage. We combined subgroup-specific association estimates in inverse variance-weighted, fixed-effects and Bayesian meta-analyses. We also combined fixed-effects meta-analytic t-test statistics for SVE and VE in multi-trait SNP association analyses. No loci reached genome-wide significance in trans-ethnic meta-analyses. However, we found genome-wide significant SNPs intronic to an apoptosis-enhancing gene previously associated with QRS interval duration (FAF1; lead SNP rs7545860; effect allele frequency = 0.02; P = 2.0 × 10) in multi-trait analysis among European ancestry participants and near a locus encoding calcium-dependent glycoproteins (DSC3; lead SNP rs8086068; effect allele frequency = 0.17) in meta-analysis of SVE (P = 4.0 × 10) and multi-trait analysis (P = 2.9 × 10) among African ancestry participants. The novel findings suggest several mechanisms by which genetic variation may predispose to ectopy in humans and highlight the potential value of leveraging pleiotropy in future studies of ectopy-related phenotypes.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Scientific reports
Volume
8
Issue
1
Number of Pages
5675
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2045-2322
DOI
10.1038/s41598-018-23843-z
Alternate Journal
Sci Rep
PMID
29618737
PMCID
PMC5884864
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