Abstract

Human serum uric acid concentration (SUA) is a complex trait. A recent meta-analysis of multiple genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified 28 loci associated with SUA jointly explaining only 7.7% of the SUA variance, with 3.4% explained by two major loci (SLC2A9 and ABCG2). Here we examined whether gene–gene interactions had any roles in regulating SUA using two large GWAS cohorts included in the meta-analysis [the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study cohort (ARIC) and the Framingham Heart Study cohort (FHS)]. We found abundant genome-wide significant local interactions in ARIC in the 4p16.1 region located mostly in an intergenic area near SLC2A9 that were not driven by linkage disequilibrium and were replicated in FHS. Taking the forward selection approach, we constructed a model of five SNPs with marginal effects and three epistatic SNP pairs in ARIC—three marginal SNPs were located within SLC2A9 and the remaining SNPs were all located in the nearby intergenic area. The full model explained 1.5% more SUA variance than that explained by the lead SNP alone, but only 0.3% was contributed by the marginal and epistatic effects of the SNPs in the intergenic area. Functional analysis revealed strong evidence that the epistatically interacting SNPs in the intergenic area were unusually enriched at enhancers active in ENCODE hepatic (HepG2, P = 4.7E−05) and precursor red blood (K562, P = 5.0E−06) cells, putatively regulating transcription of WDR1 and SLC2A9. These results suggest that exploring epistatic interactions is valuable in uncovering the complex functional mechanisms underlying the 4p16.1 region.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHuman serum uric acid concentration (SUA) is the outcome of balancing production (primarily in the liver) against excretion (mostly in the kidney) [1]

  • Human serum uric acid concentration (SUA) is the outcome of balancing production against excretion [1]

  • We examined whether gene –gene interactions had any roles in regulating SUA using two large genome-wide association studies (GWAS) cohorts included in the meta-analysis [the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study cohort (ARIC) and the Framingham Heart Study cohort (FHS)]

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Summary

Introduction

Human serum uric acid concentration (SUA) is the outcome of balancing production (primarily in the liver) against excretion (mostly in the kidney) [1]. High SUA (i.e. hyperuricaemia) can lead to gout [2]. SUA is a complex trait with estimated heritability ranging from 40 to 70% (3 – 5). A recent meta-analysis comprising .140 000 individuals of European ancestry identified 18 novel loci in addition to 10 previous known that jointly explained only 7.7% of the SUA variance, of which 3.4% was explained by SLC2A9 and ABCG2 [6]. The meta-analysis results reiterate the ‘missing heritability’ issue [7,8] but reinforce the impression that increasing the sample size is effective in discovering novel loci but with decreasing effects (9 – 11). Gene – gene interactions (epistasis)—a potential source of SUA variation, were not considered in the meta-analysis study [6].

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