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GWAS Study

Large-scale brainstem neuroimaging and genetic analyses provide new insights into the neuronal mechanisms of hypertension.

Gurholt TP, Elvsåshagen T, Bahrami S et al.

39663699 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
174014 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GT
Gurholt TP
ET
Elvsåshagen T
BS
Bahrami S
RZ
Rahman Z
SA
Shadrin A
AD
Askeland-Gjerde DE
VD
van der Meer D
FO
Frei O
KT
Kaufmann T
SI
Sønderby IE
HS
Halvorsen S
WL
Westlye LT
AO
Andreassen OA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

While brainstem regions are central regulators of blood pressure, the neuronal mechanisms underlying their role in hypertension remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the structural and genetic relationships between global and regional brainstem volumes and blood pressure. We used magnetic resonance imaging data from n = 32,666 UK Biobank participants, and assessed the association of volumes of the whole brainstem and its main regions with blood pressure. We applied powerful statistical genetic tools, including bivariate causal mixture modeling (MiXeR) and conjunctional false discovery rate (conjFDR), to non-overlapping genome-wide association studies of brainstem volumes (n = 27,034) and blood pressure (n = 321,843) in the UK Biobank cohort. We observed negative associations between the whole brainstem and medulla oblongata volumes and systolic blood and pulse pressure, and positive relationships between midbrain and pons volumes and blood pressure traits when adjusting for the whole brainstem volume (all partial correlation coefficients ∣r∣ effects between 0.03 and 0.05, p ≤ 0.0042). We observed the largest genetic overlap for the whole brainstem, sharing 77% of its trait-influencing variants with blood pressure. We identified 65 shared loci between brainstem volumes and blood pressure traits and mapped these to 71 genes, implicating molecular pathways linked to sympathetic nervous system development, metal ion transport, and vascular homeostasis. The present findings support a link between brainstem structures and blood pressure and provide insights into their shared genetic underpinnings. The overlapping genetic architectures and mapped genes offer mechanistic information about the roles of brainstem regions in hypertension.

174,014 European ancestry females

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

174014
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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