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Genome-wide association study for serum urate concentrations and gout among African Americans identifies genomic risk loci and a novel URAT1 loss-of-function allele

Authors :
Cameron D. Palmer
Michael F. Flessner
David S. Siscovick
Shih-Jen Hwang
Adebowale Adeyemo
Yan Meng
Mariam Semmo
Anna Köttgen
Charles N. Rotimi
Sharon B. Wyatt
Owen M. Woodward
Caroline S. Fox
Alan B. Zonderman
Muredach P. Reilly
Adrienne Tin
Ching-Ti Liu
Daniel Shriner
Mike A. Nalls
Michele K. Evans
Michael G. Shlipak
Wen Hong Linda Kao
L. Adrienne Cupples
Qiong Yang
Michael Köttgen
Xiaoning Lu
Ermeg L. Akylbekova
Source :
Human Molecular Genetics. 20:4056-4068
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2011.

Abstract

Serum urate concentrations are highly heritable and elevated serum urate is a key risk factor for gout. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of serum urate in African American (AA) populations are lacking. We conducted a meta-analysis of GWAS of serum urate levels and gout among 5820 AA and a large candidate gene study among 6890 AA and 21 708 participants of European ancestry (EA) within the Candidate Gene Association Resource Consortium. Findings were tested for replication among 1996 independent AA individuals, and evaluated for their association among 28 283 EA participants of the CHARGE Consortium. Functional studies were conducted using (14)C-urate transport assays in mammalian Chinese hamster ovary cells. In the discovery GWAS of serum urate, three loci achieved genome-wide significance (P< 5.0 × 10(-8)): a novel locus near SGK1/SLC2A12 on chromosome 6 (rs9321453, P= 1.0 × 10(-9)), and two loci previously identified in EA participants, SLC2A9 (P= 3.8 × 10(-32)) and SLC22A12 (P= 2.1 × 10(-10)). A novel rare non-synonymous variant of large effect size in SLC22A12, rs12800450 (minor allele frequency 0.01, G65W), was identified and replicated (beta -1.19 mg/dl, P= 2.7 × 10(-16)). (14)C-urate transport assays showed reduced urate transport for the G65W URAT1 mutant. Finally, in analyses of 11 loci previously associated with serum urate in EA individuals, 10 of 11 lead single-nucleotide polymorphisms showed direction-consistent association with urate among AA. In summary, we identified and replicated one novel locus in association with serum urate levels and experimentally characterize the novel G65W variant in URAT1 as a functional allele. Our data support the importance of multi-ethnic GWAS in the identification of novel risk loci as well as functional variants.

Details

ISSN :
14602083 and 09646906
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Molecular Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0efea7e4ddfd9188cc9bf33b53b9503
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddr307