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Genetic association studies of fibromuscular dysplasia identify new risk loci and shared genetic basis with more common vascular diseases

Authors :
Ozan Dikilitas
Marco Pappaccogli
Peter W. de Leeuw
Witold Smigielski
Valentina d'Escamard
Lijiang Ma
Ernst Rietzschel
Kristina L. Hunker
Lu Liu
Michel Azizi
Matthew Zawistowski
Jeffrey W. Olin
Ynte M. Ruigrok
Min-Lee Yang
Stéphanie Debette
Laurence Amar
Xiang Zhou
Sergiy Kyryachenko
Jun Li
Benjamin A. Satterfield
James C. Stanley
Feiri investigators
Miikka Vikkula
Ewa Warchol Celinska
Mengyao Yu
Dawn M. Coleman
Marc De Buyzere
Nabila Bouatia-Naji
Iftikhar J. Kullo
Megastroke
Aleksander Prejbisz
Andrzej Januszewicz
Piotr Dobrowolski
Wojciech Drygas
Takiy-Eddine Berrandou
Jerzy Piwonski
Sebanti Sengupta
Jason C. Kovacic
Mark K Bakker
Santhi K. Ganesh
Xavier Jeunemaitre
Chad M. Brummett
Jean-François Deleuze
Heather L. Gornik
Sebastian Zoellner
Soto Romuald Kiando
Alexandre Persu
Adrien Georges
Aurélien Lorthioir
Natalia Fendrikova-Mahlay
Daniella Kadian-Dodov
Délia Dupré
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is an arteriopathy that presents clinically by hypertension and stroke, mostly in early middle-aged women. We report results from the first genome-wide association meta-analysis of FMD including 1962 FMD cases and 7100 controls. We confirmedPHACTR1and identified three new loci (LRP1, ATP2B1, andLIMA1)associated with FMD. Transcriptome-wide association analysis in arteries identified one additional locus (SLC24A3). FMD associated variants were located in arterial-specific enhancers active in vascular smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts. Target genes are broadly involved in mechanisms related to actin cytoskeleton and intracellular calcium homeostasis, central to vascular contraction. Cross-trait linkage disequilibrium analyses identified positive genetic correlations with blood pressure, migraine and intracranial aneurysm, and an inverse correlation with coronary artery disease, independent from the genetics of blood pressure.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7b59d9eadd9aefc3a3e247d1520eb5b4