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  • Association of three geneti...
    Dehghan, Abbas, MD; Köttgen, Anna, MD; Yang, Qiong, PhD; Hwang, Shih-Jen, PhD; Kao, WH Linda, PhD; Rivadeneira, Fernando, MD; Boerwinkle, Eric, PhD; Levy, Daniel, MD; Hofman, Albert, MD; Astor, Brad C, PhD; Benjamin, Emelia J, MD; van Duijn, Cornelia M, PhD; Witteman, Jacqueline C, PhD; Coresh, Josef, MD; Fox, Caroline S, Dr

    The Lancet, 12/2008, Letnik: 372, Številka: 9654
    Journal Article

    Summary Background Hyperuricaemia, a highly heritable trait, is a key risk factor for gout. We aimed to identify novel genes associated with serum uric acid concentration and gout. Methods Genome-wide association studies were done for serum uric acid in 7699 participants in the Framingham cohort and in 4148 participants in the Rotterdam cohort. Genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were replicated in white (n=11 024) and black (n=3843) individuals who took part in the study of Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC). The SNPs that reached genome-wide significant association with uric acid in either the Framingham cohort (p<5·0×10−8 ) or the Rotterdam cohort (p<1·0×10−7 ) were evaluated with gout. The results obtained in white participants were combined using meta-analysis. Findings Three loci in the Framingham cohort and two in the Rotterdam cohort showed genome-wide association with uric acid. Top SNPs in each locus were: missense rs16890979 in SLC2A9 (p=7·0×10−168 and 2·9×10−18 for white and black participants, respectively); missense rs2231142 in ABCG2 (p=2·5×10−60 and 9·8×10−4 ), and rs1165205 in SLC17A3 (p=3·3×10−26 and 0·33). All SNPs were direction-consistent with gout in white participants: rs16890979 (OR 0·59 per T allele, 95% CI 0·52–0·68, p=7·0×10−14 ), rs2231142 (1·74, 1·51–1·99, p=3·3×10−15 ), and rs1165205 (0·85, 0·77–0·94, p=0·002). In black participants of the ARIC study, rs2231142 was direction-consistent with gout (1·71, 1·06–2·77, p=0·028). An additive genetic risk score of high-risk alleles at the three loci showed graded associations with uric acid (272–351 μmol/L in the Framingham cohort, 269–386 μmol/L in the Rotterdam cohort, and 303–426 μmol/L in white participants of the ARIC study) and gout (frequency 2–13% in the Framingham cohort, 2–8% in the Rotterdam cohort, and 1–18% in white participants in the ARIC study). Interpretation We identified three genetic loci associated with uric acid concentration and gout. A score based on genes with a putative role in renal urate handling showed a substantial risk for gout. Funding Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO); the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.