Authors |
Paul S. de Vries, Matthew P. Conomos, Deepti Jain, Michael R. Brown, Sharon M. Lutz, Lawrence F. Bielak, James G. Terry, Joshua C. Bis, Nicholette D. Palmer, Kent D. Taylor, Lewis C. Becker, Adolfo Correa, L. Adrienne Cupples, Braxton D. Mitchell, Cecelia A. Laurie, Ramachandran S. Vasan, Wendy S. Post, and Patricia A. Peyser on behalf of the TOPMed Atherosclerosis Working Group.
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Abstract Text |
Introduction: Coronary artery calcification (CAC) is a measure of subclinical atherosclerosis that strongly predicts clinical coronary artery disease events. Previous GWAS have identified 4 loci associated with CAC. We used the expanded genomic coverage provided by whole genome sequencing (WGS) data generated by the Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) program to explore genetic associations with CAC.
Methods: The study sample consisted of 22,404 participants (52% women, mean age 58 years) with WGS and CAC data in TOPMed Freeze 6, including 12,185 European, 8,606 African, 1,010 Hispanic, and 603 East Asian ancestry participants from 10 studies. We used GENESIS to perform pooled single variant analyses adjusting for age, sex, study, ancestry group, 11 ancestry informative principal components, and the kinship matrix. We analyzed rank-normalized residuals of log(CAC+1) as a quantitative trait and CAC>100 as a binary trait. Associations with gene expression levels were examined using GTEx V7.
Results: Variants at 6 loci were significantly associated (P<5E-9) with log(CAC+1), including 4 known loci (9p21, PHACTR1, APOE, and APOB), and 2 novel loci (ARSE, P=2.7E-14; and DCAF4L2, P=3.2E-9). Known loci 9p21, APOE, and APOB were also associated with CAC>100, as was novel locus DCAF4L2. The index variant at ARSE was suggestively associated with CAC>100 (P=8.0E-7). rs5982944 in ARSE is common among African ancestry participants, but rare in European ancestry participants. The allele associated with increased CAC is also associated with increased expression of ARSE, which is located on the X chromosome and is involved in bone mineralization. rs13268080 near DCAF4L2 is common across ancestry groups, and the allele associated with increased CAC is also associated with decreased expression of MMP16, which encodes for a protein involved in the matrix remodeling of blood vessels through interactions with fibronectin and collagens.
Conclusions: Using WGS we identified two novel loci for CAC that provide valuable insights into the etiology of CAC. We plan to perform gene-based aggregate analyses in order to increase the power to detect rare variant associations, and to replicate associations at novel loci in independent samples.
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