Back to Search Start Over

Genome-wide linkage and positional association study of blood pressure response to dietary sodium intervention: the GenSalt Study.

Authors :
Mei H
Gu D
Hixson JE
Rice TK
Chen J
Shimmin LC
Schwander K
Kelly TN
Liu DP
Chen S
Huang JF
Jaquish CE
Rao DC
He J
Source :
American journal of epidemiology [Am J Epidemiol] 2012 Oct 01; Vol. 176 Suppl 7, pp. S81-90. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Aug 02.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The authors conducted a genome-wide linkage scan and positional association analysis to identify the genetic determinants of salt sensitivity of blood pressure (BP) in a large family-based, dietary-feeding study. The dietary intervention was conducted among 1,906 participants in rural China (2003-2005). A 7-day low-sodium intervention was followed by a 7-day high-sodium intervention. Salt sensitivity was defined as BP responses to low- and high-sodium interventions. Signals of the logarithm of the odds to the base 10 (LOD ≥ 3) were detected at 33-42 centimorgans of chromosome 2 (2p24.3-2p24.1), with a maximum LOD score of 3.33 for diastolic blood pressure responses to high-sodium intervention. LOD scores were 2.35-2.91 for mean arterial pressure (MAP) and 0.80-1.49 for systolic blood pressure responses in this region, respectively. Correcting for multiple tests, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs11674786 (2.7 kilobases upstream of the family with sequence similarity 84, member A, gene (FAM84A)) in the linkage region was significantly associated with diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.0007) and MAP responses (P = 0.0007), and SNP rs16983422 (2.8 kilobases upstream of the visinin-like 1 gene (VSNL1)) was marginally associated with diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.005) and MAP responses (P = 0.005). An additive interaction between SNPs rs11674786 and rs16983422 was observed, with P = 7.00 × 10(-5) and P = 7.23 × 10(-5) for diastolic blood pressure and MAP responses, respectively. The authors concluded that genetic region 2p24.3-2p24.1 might harbor functional variants for the salt sensitivity of BP.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-6256
Volume :
176 Suppl 7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of epidemiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22865701
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kws290