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Discovery and systematic characterization of risk variants and genes for coronary artery disease in over a million participants

Authors :
Helgadottir A
Giannakopoulou O
Costanzo Mc
Heribert Schunkert
Giardoglou P
Markus M. Nöthen
Zhou W
Thomas Meitinger
Deepak Atri
Murgia F
Amit Khera
Tao Jiang
Munz M
Jeanette Erdmann
Patrick T. Ellinor
Marju Orho-Melander
Rajat M. Gupta
Kazuyoshi Ishigaki
Satoshi Koyama
Güldener U
Dongkeun Jang
Hilary K. Finucane
George Hindy
George Dedoussis
Cristen J. Willer
Johan L.M. Björkegren
Aris Baras
Marc S. Sabatine
Flannick J
Arno Ruusalepp
Alanna C. Morrison
Danesh J
Christopher P. Nelson
Nicholas A Marston
Thorgeirsson G
Ida Surakka
Sherliker P
Kastrati A
Ibrahim M
Ito K
Robert Clarke
Christopher Grace
Minxian Wang
Boerwinkle E
Haider Smi
Anuj Goel
Ben Michael Brumpton
Lijiang Ma
Sekar Kathiresan
Li L
Pang S
Carolina Roselli
Issei Komuro
de Vries Ps
Kristian Hveem
Hilma Holm
Adam S. Butterworth
Lotta La
Panagiotis Deloukas
Unnur Thorsteinsdottir
Thorsten Kessler
Kamanu Fk
Roberts R
Arnar Do
Tom R. Webb
Ulirsch Jk
Jonas B. Nielsen
Reinberger T
Martin Farrall
Daniel F. Gudbjartsson
Elle M. Weeks
Kari Stefansson
Brooke N. Wolford
Krishna G. Aragam
Hugh Watkins
von Scheidt M
Yoichiro Kamatani
Pierre Zalloua
Christian T. Ruff
Muñoz Venegas L
Iftikhar J. Kullo
Gudmar Thorleifsson
Stavroula Kanoni
Olle Melander
Nilesh J. Samani
Michael R. Brown
Loukianos S. Rallidis
Jemma C. Hopewell
Mucha S
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Rapid progress of the discovery of genetic loci associated with common, complex diseases has outpaced the elucidation of mechanisms pertinent to disease pathogenesis. To address relevant barriers for coronary artery disease (CAD), we combined genetic discovery analyses with downstream characterization of likely causal variants, genes, and biological pathways. Specifically, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) comprising 181,522 cases of CAD among 1,165,690 participants. We detected 241 associations, including 54 associations and 30 loci not previously linked to CAD. Next, we prioritized likely causal variants using functionally-informed fine-mapping, yielding 42 associations with fewer than five variants in the 95% credible set. Combining eight complementary predictors, we prioritized 185 candidate causal genes, including 94 genes supported by three or more predictors. Similarity-based clustering underscored a role for early developmental processes, cell cycle signaling, and vascular proliferation in the pathogenesis of CAD. Our analysis identifies and systematically characterizes risk loci for CAD to inform experimental interrogation of putative causal mechanisms for CAD.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........47d11a72d970014198bb51e68669a88b