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Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity

Comorbidity or a combination of several diseases in the same individual is a common and widely investigated phenomenon. However, the genetic background for non–random disease combinations is not fully understood. Modern technologies and approaches to genomic data analysis enable the investigation of...

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Autores principales: Makeeva, O. A., Sleptsov, A. A., Kulish, E. V., Barbarash, O. L., Mazur, A. M., Prokhorchuk, E. B., Chekanov, N. N., Stepanov, V. A., Puzyrev, V. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: A.I. Gordeyev 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4610169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26483964
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author Makeeva, O. A.
Sleptsov, A. A.
Kulish, E. V.
Barbarash, O. L.
Mazur, A. M.
Prokhorchuk, E. B.
Chekanov, N. N.
Stepanov, V. A.
Puzyrev, V. P.
author_facet Makeeva, O. A.
Sleptsov, A. A.
Kulish, E. V.
Barbarash, O. L.
Mazur, A. M.
Prokhorchuk, E. B.
Chekanov, N. N.
Stepanov, V. A.
Puzyrev, V. P.
author_sort Makeeva, O. A.
collection PubMed
description Comorbidity or a combination of several diseases in the same individual is a common and widely investigated phenomenon. However, the genetic background for non–random disease combinations is not fully understood. Modern technologies and approaches to genomic data analysis enable the investigation of the genetic profile of patients burdened with several diseases (polypathia, disease conglomerates) and its comparison with the profiles of patients with single diseases. An association study featuring three groups of patients with various combinations of cardiovascular disorders and a control group of relatively healthy individuals was conducted. Patients were selected as follows: presence of only one disease, ischemic heart disease (IHD); a combination of two diseases, IHD and arterial hypertension (AH); and a combination of several diseases, including IHD, AH, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and hypercholesterolemia (HC). Genotyping was performed using the “My Gene” genomic service (www.i–gene.ru). An analysis of 1,400 polymorphic genetic variants and their associations with the studied phenotypes are presented. A total of 14 polymorphic variants were associated with the phenotype “IHD only,” including those in the APOB, CD226, NKX2–5, TLR2, DPP6, KLRB1, VDR, SCARB1, NEDD4L, and SREBF2 genes, and intragenic variants rs12487066, rs7807268, rs10896449, and rs944289. A total of 13 genetic markers were associated with the “IHD and AH” phenotype, including variants in the BTNL2, EGFR, CNTNAP2, SCARB1, and HNF1A genes, and intragenic polymorphisms rs801114, rs10499194, rs13207033, rs2398162, rs6501455, and rs1160312. A total of 14 genetic variants were associated with a combination of several diseases of cardiovascular continuum (CVC), including those in the TAS2R38, SEZ6L, APOA2, KLF7, CETP, ITGA4, RAD54B, LDLR, and MTAP genes, along with intragenic variants rs1333048, rs1333049, and rs6501455. One common genetic marker was identified for the “IHD only” and “IHD and AH” phenotypes: rs4765623 in the SCARB1 gene; two common genetic markers, rs663048 in SEZ6L and intragenic rs6501455, were identified for the “IHD and AH” phenotype and a combination of several diseases (syntropy); there were no common genetic markers for the “syntropy” and “IHD only” phenotypes. Classificatory analysis of the relationships between the associated genes and metabolic pathways revealed that lipid–metabolizing genes are involved in the development of all three CVC variants, whereas immunity-response genes are specific to the “IHD only” phenotype. The study demonstrated that comorbidity presents additional challenges in association studies of disease predisposition, since the genetic profile of combined forms of pathology can be markedly different from those for isolated “single” forms of a disease.
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spelling pubmed-46101692015-10-19 Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity Makeeva, O. A. Sleptsov, A. A. Kulish, E. V. Barbarash, O. L. Mazur, A. M. Prokhorchuk, E. B. Chekanov, N. N. Stepanov, V. A. Puzyrev, V. P. Acta Naturae Research Article Comorbidity or a combination of several diseases in the same individual is a common and widely investigated phenomenon. However, the genetic background for non–random disease combinations is not fully understood. Modern technologies and approaches to genomic data analysis enable the investigation of the genetic profile of patients burdened with several diseases (polypathia, disease conglomerates) and its comparison with the profiles of patients with single diseases. An association study featuring three groups of patients with various combinations of cardiovascular disorders and a control group of relatively healthy individuals was conducted. Patients were selected as follows: presence of only one disease, ischemic heart disease (IHD); a combination of two diseases, IHD and arterial hypertension (AH); and a combination of several diseases, including IHD, AH, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and hypercholesterolemia (HC). Genotyping was performed using the “My Gene” genomic service (www.i–gene.ru). An analysis of 1,400 polymorphic genetic variants and their associations with the studied phenotypes are presented. A total of 14 polymorphic variants were associated with the phenotype “IHD only,” including those in the APOB, CD226, NKX2–5, TLR2, DPP6, KLRB1, VDR, SCARB1, NEDD4L, and SREBF2 genes, and intragenic variants rs12487066, rs7807268, rs10896449, and rs944289. A total of 13 genetic markers were associated with the “IHD and AH” phenotype, including variants in the BTNL2, EGFR, CNTNAP2, SCARB1, and HNF1A genes, and intragenic polymorphisms rs801114, rs10499194, rs13207033, rs2398162, rs6501455, and rs1160312. A total of 14 genetic variants were associated with a combination of several diseases of cardiovascular continuum (CVC), including those in the TAS2R38, SEZ6L, APOA2, KLF7, CETP, ITGA4, RAD54B, LDLR, and MTAP genes, along with intragenic variants rs1333048, rs1333049, and rs6501455. One common genetic marker was identified for the “IHD only” and “IHD and AH” phenotypes: rs4765623 in the SCARB1 gene; two common genetic markers, rs663048 in SEZ6L and intragenic rs6501455, were identified for the “IHD and AH” phenotype and a combination of several diseases (syntropy); there were no common genetic markers for the “syntropy” and “IHD only” phenotypes. Classificatory analysis of the relationships between the associated genes and metabolic pathways revealed that lipid–metabolizing genes are involved in the development of all three CVC variants, whereas immunity-response genes are specific to the “IHD only” phenotype. The study demonstrated that comorbidity presents additional challenges in association studies of disease predisposition, since the genetic profile of combined forms of pathology can be markedly different from those for isolated “single” forms of a disease. A.I. Gordeyev 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4610169/ /pubmed/26483964 Text en Copyright ® 2015 Park-media Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Makeeva, O. A.
Sleptsov, A. A.
Kulish, E. V.
Barbarash, O. L.
Mazur, A. M.
Prokhorchuk, E. B.
Chekanov, N. N.
Stepanov, V. A.
Puzyrev, V. P.
Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title_full Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title_fullStr Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title_full_unstemmed Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title_short Genomic Study of Cardiovascular Continuum Comorbidity
title_sort genomic study of cardiovascular continuum comorbidity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4610169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26483964
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