Abstract

BackgroundConserved non-coding regions (CNR) have been shown to harbor gene expression regulatory elements. Genetic variations in these regions may potentially contribute to complex disease susceptibility.MethodsWe targeted CNRs of cardiovascular disease (CVD) candidate gene, Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1) with polymorphism screening among CVD patients (n = 46) using DHPLC technology. The flanking region (348 bp) of the 14 bp indel in intron 2 was further genotyped by DGGE assay in two Eastern-European CVD samples: essential hypertension (HYPEST; 470 cases, 652 controls) and coronary artery disease, CAD (CADCZ; 257 cases, controls 413). Genotype-phenotype associations were tested by regression analysis implemented in PLINK. Alignments of primate sequences were performed by ClustalW2.ResultsNine of the identified NCX1 variants were either singletons or targeted by commercial platforms. The 14 bp intronic indel (rs11274804) was represented with substantial frequency in HYPEST (6.82%) and CADCZ (14.58%). Genotyping in Eastern-Europeans (n = 1792) revealed hypervariable nature of this locus, represented by seven alternative alleles. The alignments of human-chimpanzee-macaque sequences showed that the major human variant (allele frequency 90.45%) was actually a human-specific deletion compared to other primates. In humans, this deletion was surrounded by other short (5-43 bp) deletion variants and a duplication (40 bp) polymorphism possessing overlapping breakpoints. This indicates a potential indel hotspot, triggered by the initial deletion in human lineage. An association was detected between the carrier status of 14 bp indel ancestral allele and CAD (P = 0.0016, OR = 2.02; Bonferroni significance level alpha = 0.0045), but not with hypertension. The risk for the CAD development was even higher among the patients additionally diagnosed with metabolic syndrome (P = 0.0014, OR = 2.34). Consistent with the effect on metabolic processes, suggestive evidence for the association with heart rate, serum triglyceride and LDL levels was detected (P = 0.04).ConclusionsCompared to SNPs targeted by large number of locus-specific and genome-wide assays, considerably less attention has been paid to short indel variants in the human genome. The data of genome dynamics, mutation rate and population genetics of short indels, as well as their impact on gene expressional profile and human disease susceptibility is limited. The characterization of NCX1 intronic hypervariable non-coding region enriched in human-specific indel variants contributes to this gap of knowledge.

Highlights

  • Conserved non-coding regions (CNR) have been shown to harbor gene expression regulatory elements

  • Polymorphism screening was performed with 15 different DNA pools, each consisting of DNAs of three patients with cardiovascular disease originating from two Eastern European sample sets (n = 22 from HYPEST and n = 24 from CADCZ study; detailed description is given below)

  • Denaturing High-Performance Liquid Chromatography method (DHPLC) screening of polymorphisms in NCX1 non-coding regions We analyzed human cardiovascular candidate gene, NCX1 (Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger, 2p22.1), for the conserved non-coding regions using VISTA genome browser [15] with default parameters

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Summary

Introduction

Conserved non-coding regions (CNR) have been shown to harbor gene expression regulatory elements Genetic variations in these regions may potentially contribute to complex disease susceptibility. Noncoding variants potentially contributing to the susceptibility to complex diseases are localized in promoters and enhancers, introns or 5’- and 3’-UTRs, and may affect binding of the gene expression regulators, such as transcription and splicing factors or miRNAs. Comparative genetics studies have noted several essential gene regulatory elements that are conserved among species [3,4]. Targeting evolutionarily conserved non-coding regions (CNR) in candidate genes for CVD may pinpoint regulatory elements directing the gene expression profile. Genetic variation in these regions may contribute to the susceptibility to CVD. Based on these hypotheses we aimed to target human CVD candidate gene Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1; SLC8A1) with polymorphism screening in CNRs and to test associations of identified variants with CVD and related metabolic traits in two Eastern-European populations

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