Authors |
T-A. Yapp, J. Z. Zhang, M. Krishnan, S. Liu, B. M. Blobner, H. Cheng, T. Naseri, M. S. Reupena, S. Viali, J. Tuitele, R. Deka, N. L. Hawley, S. T. McGarvey, D. E. Weeks, R. L. Minster, J. C. Carlson
|
Abstract Text |
Exploring the genetic determinants of blood pressure (BP) phenotypes in Polynesian individuals could help address inequity in research with marginalized populations and has the potential to provide additional insight to what is known from other populations around the globe about the biological foundations of such traits. In the current study, we performed genome-wide associations studies of five traits—systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), pulse pressure (PP), and hypertension (HTN)—in 4,819 research participants across five subsamples from Samoa and American Samoa. Genotypes were measured via two methods: 895,103 variants were genotyped in a subsample of 3,053 individuals from Samoa with the Affymetrix 6.0 array and 669,569 variants were genotyped in a subsample of 1,766 individuals from Samoa and American Samoa with the Illumina Global Screening Array. We then imputed up to 7,408,897 variants using a haplotype reference panel based on 1,285 participants from Samoa that were whole-genome sequenced by the TOPMed Program. We performed association testing of inverse-normally transformed traits in each subsample separately using linear or logistic mixed models, adjusting for fixed effects of age, sex, polity, principal components of ancestry and a kinship random effect. The subsamples were meta-analyzed using the p values and effect direction with weighting by the subsample size. No variants were observed to be genome-wide significant; variants at fourteen unique loci associated with BP phenotypes were observed at p < 1 × 10−7. Several of these loci have been associated with BP phenotypes before: FGF5, associated here with SBP and MAP, has been associated with HTN previously; KIF15, associated with SBP here, has been associated with PP; KCNK3, here with SBP, with SBP, DBP, and MAP; DOT1L, here with DBP and MAP, with SBP and PP previously; and PDILT, here with HTN, has been associated with SBP, DBP, and HTN. PLPPR2, associated in this study with SBP and MAP, however, has not been, to our knowledge, been associated with BP phenotypes before. Little is known about the function of PLPPR2; it is predicted to be involved in phospholipid processing and signal transduction. In this analysis, both known and novel genetic loci associated with BP phenotypes were observed, suggesting that the genetic architecture of blood pressure and hypertension in individuals from Samoa and American Samoa is affected by both universal and unique genetic determinants. Further investigation and validation of these results will be necessary to determine the biological mechanisms of these associations in cardiovascular health.
|