Multiple associated variants increase the heritability explained for plasma lipids and coronary artery disease.

Circ Cardiovasc Genet
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Plasma lipid levels as well as coronary artery disease (CAD) have been shown to be highly heritable with estimates ranging from 40% to 60%. However, top variants detected by large-scale genome-wide association studies explain only a fraction of the total variance in plasma lipid phenotypes and CAD.

METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a conditional and joint association analysis using summary-level statistics from 2 large genome-wide association meta-analyses: the Global Lipids Genetics Consortium (GLGC) study, and the Coronary Artery Disease Genome-Wide Replication and Meta-Analysis (CARDIoGRAM) study. There were 100 184 individuals from 46 GLGC studies for plasma lipids, and 22 233 cases and 64 762 controls from 14 studies for CAD. We detected several loci where multiple independent single-nucleotide polymorphisms were associated with lipid traits within a locus (12 out of 33 loci for high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 10 of 35 loci for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 13 of 44 loci for total cholesterol, and 8 of 28 loci for triglycerides), reaching genome-wide significance (P

CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that a portion of the missing heritability for lipid traits and CAD can be explained by multiple variants at each locus.

Year of Publication
2014
Journal
Circ Cardiovasc Genet
Volume
7
Issue
5
Pages
583-7
Date Published
2014 Oct
ISSN
1942-3268
URL
DOI
10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.113.000420
PubMed ID
25170055
PubMed Central ID
PMC4341828
Links
Grant list
R01 HL107816 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
R01HL107816 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
T32 HL007208 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
282255 / European Research Council / International
T32HL007208 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States