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The role of rare variants in systolic blood pressure: analysis of ExomeChip data in HyperGEN African Americans.


ABSTRACT: Cardiovascular diseases are among the most significant health problems in the United States today, with their major risk factor, hypertension, disproportionately affecting African Americans (AAs). Although GWAS have identified dozens of common variants associated with blood pressure (BP) and hypertension in European Americans, these variants collectively explain <2.5% of BP variance, and most of the genetic variants remain yet to be identified. Here, we report the results from rare-variant analysis of systolic BP using 94,595 rare and low-frequency variants (minor allele frequency, MAF, <5%) from the Illumina exome array genotyped in 2,045 HyperGEN AAs. In addition to single-variant analysis, 4 gene-level association tests were used for analysis: burden and family-based SKAT tests using MAF cutoffs of 1 and 5%. The gene-based methods often provided lower p values than the single-variant approach. Some consistency was observed across these 4 gene-based analysis options. While neither the gene-based analyses nor the single-variant analysis produced genome-wide significant results, the top signals, which had supporting evidence from multiple gene-based methods, were of borderline significance. Though additional molecular validations are required, 6 of the 16 most promising genes are biologically plausible with physiological connections to BP regulation.

SUBMITTER: Sung YJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4374048 | biostudies-literature | 2015

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The role of rare variants in systolic blood pressure: analysis of ExomeChip data in HyperGEN African Americans.

Sung Yun Ju YJ   Basson Jacob J   Cheng Nuo N   Nguyen Khanh-Dung H KD   Nandakumar Priyanka P   Hunt Steven C SC   Arnett Donna K DK   Dávila-Román Victor G VG   Rao Dabeeru C DC   Chakravarti Aravinda A  

Human heredity 20150101 1


Cardiovascular diseases are among the most significant health problems in the United States today, with their major risk factor, hypertension, disproportionately affecting African Americans (AAs). Although GWAS have identified dozens of common variants associated with blood pressure (BP) and hypertension in European Americans, these variants collectively explain <2.5% of BP variance, and most of the genetic variants remain yet to be identified. Here, we report the results from rare-variant analy  ...[more]

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