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Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation

Pathway-based association methods have been proposed to be an effective approach in identifying disease genes, when single-marker association tests do not have sufficient power. The analysis of quantitative traits may be benefited from these approaches, by sampling from two extreme tails of the dist...

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Autores principales: Wang, Kai, Edmondson, Andrew C., Li, Mingyao, Gao, Fan, Qasim, Atif N., Devaney, Joseph M., Burnett, Mary Susan, Waterworth, Dawn M., Mooser, Vincent, Grant, Struan F. A., Epstein, Stephen E., Reilly, Muredach P., Hakonarson, Hakon, Rader, Daniel J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3268595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22303337
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2011.00041
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author Wang, Kai
Edmondson, Andrew C.
Li, Mingyao
Gao, Fan
Qasim, Atif N.
Devaney, Joseph M.
Burnett, Mary Susan
Waterworth, Dawn M.
Mooser, Vincent
Grant, Struan F. A.
Epstein, Stephen E.
Reilly, Muredach P.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Rader, Daniel J.
author_facet Wang, Kai
Edmondson, Andrew C.
Li, Mingyao
Gao, Fan
Qasim, Atif N.
Devaney, Joseph M.
Burnett, Mary Susan
Waterworth, Dawn M.
Mooser, Vincent
Grant, Struan F. A.
Epstein, Stephen E.
Reilly, Muredach P.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Rader, Daniel J.
author_sort Wang, Kai
collection PubMed
description Pathway-based association methods have been proposed to be an effective approach in identifying disease genes, when single-marker association tests do not have sufficient power. The analysis of quantitative traits may be benefited from these approaches, by sampling from two extreme tails of the distribution. Here we tested a pathway association approach on a small genome-wide association study (GWAS) on 653 subjects with extremely high high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels and 784 subjects with low HDL-C levels. We identified 102 genes in the sterol transport and metabolism pathways that collectively associate with HDL-C levels, and replicated these association signals in an independent GWAS. Interestingly, the pathways include 18 genes implicated in previous GWAS on lipid traits, suggesting that genuine HDL-C genes are highly enriched in these pathways. Additionally, multiple biologically relevant loci in the pathways were not detected by previous GWAS, including genes implicated in previous candidate gene association studies (such as LEPR, APOA2, HDLBP, SOAT2), genes that cause Mendelian forms of lipid disorders (such as DHCR24), and genes expressing dyslipidemia phenotypes in knockout mice (such as SOAT1, PON1). Our study suggests that sampling from two extreme tails of a quantitative trait and examining genetic pathways may yield biological insights from smaller samples than are generally required using single-marker analysis in large-scale GWAS. Our results also implicate that functionally related genes work together to regulate complex quantitative traits, and that future large-scale studies may benefit from pathway-association approaches to identify novel pathways regulating HDL-C levels.
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spelling pubmed-32685952012-02-02 Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation Wang, Kai Edmondson, Andrew C. Li, Mingyao Gao, Fan Qasim, Atif N. Devaney, Joseph M. Burnett, Mary Susan Waterworth, Dawn M. Mooser, Vincent Grant, Struan F. A. Epstein, Stephen E. Reilly, Muredach P. Hakonarson, Hakon Rader, Daniel J. Front Genet Genetics Pathway-based association methods have been proposed to be an effective approach in identifying disease genes, when single-marker association tests do not have sufficient power. The analysis of quantitative traits may be benefited from these approaches, by sampling from two extreme tails of the distribution. Here we tested a pathway association approach on a small genome-wide association study (GWAS) on 653 subjects with extremely high high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels and 784 subjects with low HDL-C levels. We identified 102 genes in the sterol transport and metabolism pathways that collectively associate with HDL-C levels, and replicated these association signals in an independent GWAS. Interestingly, the pathways include 18 genes implicated in previous GWAS on lipid traits, suggesting that genuine HDL-C genes are highly enriched in these pathways. Additionally, multiple biologically relevant loci in the pathways were not detected by previous GWAS, including genes implicated in previous candidate gene association studies (such as LEPR, APOA2, HDLBP, SOAT2), genes that cause Mendelian forms of lipid disorders (such as DHCR24), and genes expressing dyslipidemia phenotypes in knockout mice (such as SOAT1, PON1). Our study suggests that sampling from two extreme tails of a quantitative trait and examining genetic pathways may yield biological insights from smaller samples than are generally required using single-marker analysis in large-scale GWAS. Our results also implicate that functionally related genes work together to regulate complex quantitative traits, and that future large-scale studies may benefit from pathway-association approaches to identify novel pathways regulating HDL-C levels. Frontiers Research Foundation 2011-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3268595/ /pubmed/22303337 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2011.00041 Text en Copyright © 2011 Wang, Edmondson, Li, Gao, Qasim, Devaney, Burnett, Waterworth, Mooser, Grant, Epstein, Reilly, Hakonarson and Rader. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to a non-exclusive license between the authors and Frontiers Media SA, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and other Frontiers conditions are complied with.
spellingShingle Genetics
Wang, Kai
Edmondson, Andrew C.
Li, Mingyao
Gao, Fan
Qasim, Atif N.
Devaney, Joseph M.
Burnett, Mary Susan
Waterworth, Dawn M.
Mooser, Vincent
Grant, Struan F. A.
Epstein, Stephen E.
Reilly, Muredach P.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Rader, Daniel J.
Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title_full Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title_fullStr Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title_full_unstemmed Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title_short Pathway-Wide Association Study Implicates Multiple Sterol Transport and Metabolism Genes in HDL Cholesterol Regulation
title_sort pathway-wide association study implicates multiple sterol transport and metabolism genes in hdl cholesterol regulation
topic Genetics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3268595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22303337
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2011.00041
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