학술논문

Investigating the Genetic Architecture of the PR Interval Using Clinical Phenotypes
Document Type
article
Source
Circulation Genomic and Precision Medicine. 10(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology
Heart Disease
Atherosclerosis
Genetics
Cardiovascular
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Atrial Fibrillation
Body Mass Index
Case-Control Studies
Electrocardiography
Female
Genotype
Humans
Male
Metabolic Syndrome
Middle Aged
Odds Ratio
Phenotype
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Risk Factors
Waist Circumference
Young Adult
PR interval
atrial fibrillation
biomarker
cardiac electrophysiology
molecular epidemiology
risk factors
Medical Biotechnology
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Cardiovascular System & Hematology
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Language
Abstract
One potential use for the PR interval is as a biomarker of disease risk. We hypothesized that quantifying the shared genetic architectures of the PR interval and a set of clinical phenotypes would identify genetic mechanisms contributing to PR variability and identify diseases associated with a genetic predictor of PR variability. We used ECG measurements from the ARIC study (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities; n=6731 subjects) and 63 genetically modulated diseases from the eMERGE network (Electronic Medical Records and Genomics; n=12 978). We measured pairwise genetic correlations (rG) between PR phenotypes (PR interval, PR segment, P-wave duration) and each of the 63 phenotypes. The PR segment was genetically correlated with atrial fibrillation (rG=-0.88; P=0.0009). An analysis of metabolic phenotypes in ARIC also showed that the P wave was genetically correlated with waist circumference (rG=0.47; P=0.02). A genetically predicted PR interval phenotype based on 645 714 single-nucleotide polymorphisms was associated with atrial fibrillation (odds ratio=0.89 per SD change; 95% confidence interval, 0.83-0.95; P=0.0006). The differing pattern of associations among the PR phenotypes is consistent with analyses that show that the genetic correlation between the P wave and PR segment was not significantly different from 0 (rG=-0.03 [0.16]). The genetic architecture of the PR interval comprises modulators of atrial fibrillation risk and obesity.