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A favorable cardiometabolic profile is associated with the G allele of the genetic variant rs5068 in African Americans: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA).

Citation
Cannone, V., et al. “A Favorable Cardiometabolic Profile Is Associated With The G Allele Of The Genetic Variant Rs5068 In African Americans: The Multi-Ethnic Study Of Atherosclerosis (Mesa).”. Plos One, p. e0189858.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Valentina Cannone, Christopher G Scott, Paul A Decker, Nicholas B Larson, Walter Palmas, Kent D Taylor, Thomas J Wang, Deepak K Gupta, Suzette J Bielinski, John C Burnett
Abstract

In whites, the minor G allele of the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) genetic variant rs5068 is associated with higher circulating levels of ANP and B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), lower risk of hypertension, higher high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol plasma levels, and lower prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome. The observed phenotype is consistent with the blood pressure lowering and metabolic properties of ANP and BNP. The cardiovascular and metabolic phenotype associated with rs5068 genotypes in African Americans is undefined. We genotyped 1631 African Americans in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) for rs5068 and investigated their phenotype. Genotype frequencies of rs5068 were 93.2% AA (n = 1520), 6.7% AG (n = 110) and 0.1% GG (n = 1). All subsequent analyses are AG + GG versus AA genotype. Using a Bonferroni corrected level of significance of 0.005, the prevalence of metabolic syndrome (23% vs 38%, age-sex-adjusted p = 0.002) and triglycerides plasma values (76 vs 90 mg/dl, age-sex-BMI adjusted p = 0.004) were both significantly lower in the AG+GG genotypes. In the AG+GG genotypes, the prevalence of diabetes (8% vs 18%, age-sex-BMI-adjusted p = 0.02) and insulin plasma levels tended to be lower (4.8 vs 5.7 μU/ml, age-sex-BMI adjusted p = 0.04) whereas HDL-cholesterol levels tended to be higher (55 vs 50 mg/dl, age-sex-BMI-adjusted p = 0.04). No association was found with hypertension. The association between the rs5068 G allele and a favorable metabolic phenotype is now shown in African Americans. The rs5068 AG+GG genotypes are associated with lower prevalence of metabolic syndrome and lower triglycerides values.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
PloS one
Volume
12
Issue
12
Number of Pages
e0189858
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1932-6203
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0189858
Alternate Journal
PLoS ONE
PMID
29253899
PMCID
PMC5734753
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