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GWAS Study

From the Cover: Whole-genome association study identifies STK39 as a hypertension susceptibility gene.

Wang Y, O'Connell JR, McArdle PF et al.

19114657 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
7478 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

WY
Wang Y
OJ
O'Connell JR
MP
McArdle PF
WJ
Wade JB
DS
Dorff SE
SS
Shah SJ
SX
Shi X
PL
Pan L
RE
Rampersaud E
SH
Shen H
KJ
Kim JD
SA
Subramanya AR
SN
Steinle NI
PA
Parsa A
OC
Ober CC
WP
Welling PA
CA
Chakravarti A
WA
Weder AB
CR
Cooper RS
MB
Mitchell BD
SA
Shuldiner AR
CY
Chang YP
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Hypertension places a major burden on individual and public health, but the genetic basis of this complex disorder is poorly understood. We conducted a genome-wide association study of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) in Amish subjects and found strong association signals with common variants in a serine/threonine kinase gene, STK39. We confirmed this association in an independent Amish and 4 non-Amish Caucasian samples including the Diabetes Genetics Initiative, Framingham Heart Study, GenNet, and Hutterites (meta-analysis combining all studies: n = 7,125, P < 10(-6)). The higher BP-associated alleles have frequencies > 0.09 and were associated with increases of 3.3/1.3 mm Hg in SBP/DBP, respectively, in the Amish subjects and with smaller but consistent effects across the non-Amish studies. Cell-based functional studies showed that STK39 interacts with WNK kinases and cation-chloride cotransporters, mutations in which cause monogenic forms of BP dysregulation. We demonstrate that in vivo, STK39 is expressed in the distal nephron, where it may interact with these proteins. Although none of the associated SNPs alter protein structure, we identified and experimentally confirmed a highly conserved intronic element with allele-specific in vitro transcription activity as a functional candidate for this association. Thus, variants in STK39 may influence BP by increasing STK39 expression and consequently altering renal Na(+) excretion, thus unifying rare and common BP-regulating alleles in the same physiological pathway.

542 Old Order Amish individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

7478
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
5,229 European ancestry individuals, 1,347 Amish individuals, 575 Hutterite individuals
Replication Participants
Other, European
Ancestry
U.S., Canada
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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