Discovery of rare variants associated with blood pressure regulation through meta-analysis of 1.3 million individuals

Publication type

Journal Article

Authors

  1. Praveen Surendran
  2. Elena V. Feofanova
  3. Najim Lahrouchi
  4. Ioanna Ntalla
(more)

Publication date

November 23, 2020

Summary:

Genetic studies of blood pressure (BP) to date have mainly analyzed common variants (minor allele frequency > 0.05). In a meta-analysis of up to ~1.3 million participants, we discovered 106 new BP-associated genomic regions and 87 rare (minor allele frequency ≤ 0.01) variant BP associations (P < 5 × 10−8), of which 32 were in new BP-associated loci and 55 were independent BP-associated single-nucleotide variants within known BP-associated regions. Average effects of rare variants (44% coding) were ~8 times larger than common variant effects and indicate potential candidate causal genes at new and known loci (for example, GATA5 and PLCB3). BP-associated variants (including rare and common) were enriched in regions of active chromatin in fetal tissues, potentially linking fetal development with BP regulation in later life. Multivariable Mendelian randomization suggested possible inverse effects of elevated systolic and diastolic BP on large artery stroke. Our study demonstrates the utility of rare-variant analyses for identifying candidate genes and the results highlight potential therapeutic targets.

Published in

Nature Genetics

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-020-00713-x

ISSN

10614036

Subjects

Link

- https://lib.essex.ac.uk/iii/encore/record/C__Rb1680801

Notes

Online Early

#526449

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