
Marju Orho-Melander
Professor

Genome-wide association study identifies eight loci associated with blood pressure
Author
Summary, in English
Elevated blood pressure is a common, heritable cause of cardiovascular disease worldwide. To date, identification of common genetic variants influencing blood pressure has proven challenging. We tested 2.5 million genotyped and imputed SNPs for association with systolic and diastolic blood pressure in 34,433 subjects of European ancestry from the Global BPgen consortium and followed up findings with direct genotyping (N <= 71,225 European ancestry, N <= 12,889 Indian Asian ancestry) and in silico comparison (CHARGE consortium, N 29,136). We identified association between systolic or diastolic blood pressure and common variants in eight regions near the CYP17A1 (P = 7 x 10(-24)), CYP1A2 (P = 1 x 10(-23)), FGF5 (P = 1 x 10(-21)), SH2B3 (P = 3 x 10(-18)), MTHFR (P = 2 x 10(-13)), c10orf107 (P = 1 x 10(-9)), ZNF652 (P = 5 x 10(-9)) and PLCD3 (P = 1 x 10(-8)) genes. All variants associated with continuous blood pressure were associated with dichotomous hypertension. These associations between common variants and blood pressure and hypertension offer mechanistic insights into the regulation of blood pressure and may point to novel targets for interventions to prevent cardiovascular disease.
Department/s
- Internal Medicine - Epidemiology
- Genomics, Diabetes and Endocrinology
- Cardiovascular Research - Hypertension
Publishing year
2009
Language
English
Pages
666-676
Publication/Series
Nature Genetics
Volume
41
Issue
6
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Topic
- Other Clinical Medicine
- Endocrinology and Diabetes
- Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems
Status
Published
Research group
- Internal Medicine - Epidemiology
- Genomics, Diabetes and Endocrinology
- Cardiovascular Research - Hypertension
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1546-1718