학술논문

Whole Genome Sequence Analysis of the Plasma Proteome in Black Adults Provides Novel Insights Into Cardiovascular Disease
Document Type
article
Author
Katz, Daniel HTahir, Usman ABick, Alexander GPampana, AkhilNgo, DebbyBenson, Mark DYu, ZhiRobbins, Jeremy MChen, Zsu-ZsuCruz, Daniel EDeng, ShuliangFarrell, LaurieSinha, SumitaSchmaier, Alec AShen, DongxiaoGao, YanHall, Michael ECorrea, AdolfoTracy, Russell PDurda, PeterTaylor, Kent DLiu, YongmeiJohnson, W CraigGuo, XiuqingYao, JieIda Chen, Yii-DerManichaikul, Ani WJain, DeeptiBouchard, ClaudeSarzynski, Mark ARich, Stephen SRotter, Jerome IWang, Thomas JWilson, James GNatarajan, PradeepGerszten, Robert EAbe, NamikoAbecasis, GonçaloAguet, FrancoisAlbert, ChristineAlmasy, LauraAlonso, AlvaroAment, SethAnderson, PeterAnugu, PramodApplebaum-Bowden, DeborahArdlie, KristinArking, DanArnett, Donna KAshley-Koch, AllisonAslibekyan, StellaAssimes, TimAuer, PaulAvramopoulos, DimitriosAyas, NajibBalasubramanian, AdithyaBarnard, JohnBarnes, KathleenBarr, R GrahamBarron-Casella, EmilyBarwick, LucasBeaty, TerriBeck, GeraldBecker, DianeBecker, LewisBeer, RebeccaBeitelshees, AmberBenjamin, EmeliaBenos, TakisBezerra, MarcosBielak, LarryBis, JoshuaBlackwell, ThomasBlangero, JohnBoerwinkle, EricBowden, Donald WBowler, RussellBrody, JenniferBroeckel, UlrichBroome, JaiBrown, DeborahBunting, KarenBurchard, EstebanBustamante, CarlosButh, ErinCade, BrianCardwell, JonathanCarey, VincentCarrier, JulieCarson, AprilCarty, CaraCasaburi, RichardCasas Romero, Juan PCasella, JamesCastaldi, PeterChaffin, MarkChang, ChristyChang, Yi-ChengChasman, DanielChavan, Sameer
Source
Circulation. 145(5)
Subject
Epidemiology
Health Sciences
Aging
Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease
Human Genome
Genetics
Prevention
Cardiovascular
Heart Disease
Biotechnology
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Black People
Cardiovascular Diseases
Female
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Male
Proteome
cardiovascular disease
genetics
proteomics
race and ethnicity
National Heart
Lung
and Blood Institute TOPMed (Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine) Consortium†
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Cardiovascular System & Hematology
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Clinical sciences
Sports science and exercise
Language
Abstract
BackgroundPlasma proteins are critical mediators of cardiovascular processes and are the targets of many drugs. Previous efforts to characterize the genetic architecture of the plasma proteome have been limited by a focus on individuals of European descent and leveraged genotyping arrays and imputation. Here we describe whole genome sequence analysis of the plasma proteome in individuals with greater African ancestry, increasing our power to identify novel genetic determinants.MethodsProteomic profiling of 1301 proteins was performed in 1852 Black adults from the Jackson Heart Study using aptamer-based proteomics (SomaScan). Whole genome sequencing association analysis was ascertained for all variants with minor allele count ≥5. Results were validated using an alternative, antibody-based, proteomic platform (Olink) as well as replicated in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and the HERITAGE Family Study (Health, Risk Factors, Exercise Training and Genetics).ResultsWe identify 569 genetic associations between 479 proteins and 438 unique genetic regions at a Bonferroni-adjusted significance level of 3.8×10-11. These associations include 114 novel locus-protein relationships and an additional 217 novel sentinel variant-protein relationships. Novel cardiovascular findings include new protein associations at the APOE gene locus including ZAP70 (sentinel single nucleotide polymorphism [SNP] rs7412-T, β=0.61±0.05, P=3.27×10-30) and MMP-3 (β=-0.60±0.05, P=1.67×10-32), as well as a completely novel pleiotropic locus at the HPX gene, associated with 9 proteins. Further, the associations suggest new mechanisms of genetically mediated cardiovascular disease linked to African ancestry; we identify a novel association between variants linked to APOL1-associated chronic kidney and heart disease and the protein CKAP2 (rs73885319-G, β=0.34±0.04, P=1.34×10-17) as well as an association between ATTR amyloidosis and RBP4 levels in community-dwelling individuals without heart failure.ConclusionsTaken together, these results provide evidence for the functional importance of variants in non-European populations, and suggest new biological mechanisms for ancestry-specific determinants of lipids, coagulation, and myocardial function.