Abstract

BackgroundCholesterol concentrations in blood are related to cardiovascular diseases. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of cholesterol levels identified a number of single-locus effects on total cholesterol (TC) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. Here, we report single-locus and epistasis SNP effects on TC and HDL-C using the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) data.ResultsSingle-locus effects and pairwise epistasis effects of 432,096 SNP markers were tested for their significance on log-transformed TC and HDL-C levels. Twenty nine additive SNP effects reached single-locus genome-wide significance (p < 7.2 × 10-8) and no dominance effect reached genome-wide significance. Two new gene regions were detected, the RAB3GAP1-R3HDM1-LCT-MCM6 region of chr02 for TC identified by six new SNPs, and the OSBPL8-ZDHHC17 region (chr12) for HDL-C identified by one new SNP. The remaining 22 single-locus SNP effects confirmed previously reported genes or gene regions. For TC, three SNPs identified two gene regions that were tightly linked with previously reported genes associated with TC, including rs599839 that was 10 bases downstream PSRC1 and 3.498 kb downstream CELSR2, rs4970834 in CELSR2, and rs4245791 in ABCG8 that slightly overlapped with ABCG5. For HDL-C, LPL was confirmed by 12 SNPs 8-45 kb downstream, CETP by two SNPs 0.5-11 kb upstream, and the LIPG-ACAA2 region by five SNPs inside this region. Two epistasis effects on TC and thirteen epistasis effects on HDL-C reached the significance of "suggestive linkage". The most significant epistasis effect (p = 5.72 × 10-13) was close to reaching "significant linkage" and was a dominance × dominance effect of HDL-C between LMBRD1 (chr06) and the LRIG3 region (chr12), and this pair of gene regions had six other D × D effects with "suggestive linkage".ConclusionsGenome-wide association analysis of the FHS data detected two new gene regions with genome-wide significance, detected epistatic SNP effects on TC and HDL-C with the significance of suggestive linkage in seven pairs of gene regions, and confirmed some previously reported gene regions associated with TC and HDL-C.

Highlights

  • Cholesterol concentrations in blood are related to cardiovascular diseases

  • Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and human genetic studies have identified a number of genes and gene regions affecting cholesterol phenotypes including total cholesterol (TC) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

  • The single-locus analysis was intended to detect new targets or confirm existing targets using a method of analysis different from those used in previous reports based on an extended Kempthorne model that allows Hardy-Weinberger disequilibrium and linkage disequilibrium [13] for genome-wide association studies (GWAS) analysis of the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) data while the epistasis analysis of TC and HDL-C was the first such attempt using the FHS data and the 500 k SNP panel

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Summary

Introduction

Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of cholesterol levels identified a number of single-locus effects on total cholesterol (TC) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. We report single-locus and epistasis SNP effects on TC and HDL-C using the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) data. Total cholesterol (TC) is related to coronary diseases and high-density lipoprotein (HDL-C) cholesterol is antiatherogenic. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and human genetic studies have identified a number of genes and gene regions affecting cholesterol phenotypes including TC and HDL-C [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. The single-locus analysis was intended to detect new targets or confirm existing targets using a method of analysis different from those used in previous reports based on an extended Kempthorne model that allows Hardy-Weinberger disequilibrium and linkage disequilibrium [13] for GWAS analysis of the FHS data while the epistasis analysis of TC and HDL-C was the first such attempt using the FHS data and the 500 k SNP panel

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