Abstract

African ancestry individuals have a more favorable lipoprotein profile than Caucasians, although the mechanisms for these differences remain unclear. We measured fasting serum lipoproteins and genotyped 768 tagging or potentially functional single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across 33 candidate gene regions in 401 Afro-Caribbeans older than 18 years belonging to 7 multi-generational pedigrees (mean family size 51, range 21-113, 3,426 relative pairs). All lipoproteins were significantly heritable (P<0.05). Gender-specific analysis showed that heritability for triglycerides was much higher (P<0.01) in women than in men (women, 0.62+/-0.18, P<0.01; men, 0.13+/-0.17, P>0.10), but the heritability for LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) was higher (P<0.05) in men than in women (men, 0.79+/-0.21, P<0.01; women, 0.39+/-0.12, P<0.01). The top 14 SNPs that passed the false discovery rate threshold in the families were then tested for replication in an independent population-based sample of 1,750 Afro-Caribbean men aged 40+ years. Our results revealed significant associations for three SNPs in two genes (rs5929 and rs6511720 in LDLR and rs7517090 in PCSK9) and LDL-C in both the family study and in the replication study. Our findings suggest that LDLR and PCSK9 variants may contribute to a variation in LDL-C among African ancestry individuals. Future sequencing and functional studies of these loci may advance our understanding of genetic factors contributing to LDL-C in African ancestry populations.

Highlights

  • African ancestry individuals have a more favorable lipoprotein profile than Caucasians, the mechanisms for these differences remain unclear

  • body mass index (BMI) Waist circumference Lifestyle Alcohol use (>1 drink/week) (%) Current smoking (%) TV viewing (h/week) Time spent walking per week Reproductive Use of oral contraceptives (%) Ever pregnant (%) Number of pregnancies Postmenopausal status (%) Lipoprotein levels TRIG HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) Medical conditions Obesitya (%) Diabetesb (%) Hypertensionc (%)

  • The current study examined the heritability of lipoprotein phenotypes in a well-characterized collection of extended multi-generational families of West African ancestry on the Caribbean island of Tobago

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Summary

Introduction

African ancestry individuals have a more favorable lipoprotein profile than Caucasians, the mechanisms for these differences remain unclear. Individuals of African ancestry have a more favorable lipoprotein profile than Caucasians, characterized by lower levels of TRIG and higher levels of HDL-C [5,6,7,8]. The differences in TRIG levels are independent of the greater degree of obesity among individuals of African ancestry and several other risk factors and appear to be consistent across African populations in different environments [9], indicating a possible role of genetic factors.

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