Abstract
Plenty of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for coronary artery disease (CAD) and blood pressure (BP). However, these SNPs only explain a small proportion of the heritability of two traits/diseases. Although high BP is a major risk factor for CAD, the genetic intercommunity between them remain largely unknown. To recognize novel loci associated with CAD and BP, a genetic-pleiotropy-informed conditional false discovery rate (cFDR) method was applied on two summary statistics of CAD and BP from existing GWASs. Stratified Q-Q and fold enrichment plots showed a high pleiotropic enrichment of SNPs associated with two traits. Adopting a cFDR of 0.05 as a threshold, 55 CAD-associated loci (25 variants being novel) and 47 BP loci (18 variants being novel) were identified, 25 of which were pleiotropic loci (13 variants being novel) for both traits. Among the 32 genes these 25 SNPs were annotated to, 20 genes were newly detected compared to previous GWASs. This study showed the cFDR approach could improve gene discovery by incorporating GWAS datasets of two related traits. These findings may provide novel understanding of etiology relationships between CAD and BP.
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Introduction
As one of the leading causes of human mortality and disability all over the world, coronary artery disease (CAD) is the most common heart disease characterized by the declining of arterial elastic properties and the deposition of lipid-rich atheroma1,2. Previous studies suggested that CAD was a complex multifactorial disease with both genetic and environmental determinants3,4,5. Heritability of CAD was estimated to be approximately 40% to 60%, which indicated that genetic determinants contribute significantly to the development of CAD6. However, the known CAD loci together only explained 8.53% of CAD heritability7. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) are two common complex traits with high heritability and the related genetic variants can lead to hypertension1,8,9. Elevated BP is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. To date, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified more than 120 loci related to blood pressure (BP), and 107 independent loci were validated by Warren et al.10.
There have been substantial epidemiological evidences to demonstrate that BP is associated with risk of CAD11,12,13. A GWAS reported that BP risk score was positively associated with stroke (P = 6.0 × 10−6), alterations of cardiac structure (P = 3.3 × 10−5) and CAD (P = 8.1 × 10−29)14. Another study involving genetic risk scores based on 26 BP-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) showed that the SBP and DBP related risk alleles had 70% and 59% higher odds of increasing CAD, respectively15. Other evidences suggested that genetic pleiotropic effect exists in CAD and BP. Genetic pleiotropy is the phenomenon of a single gene or variant being related to two or more phenotypes16,17,18. A meta-analysis study reported that SNP rs12413409 for CAD was detected to be associated with hypertension19. Besides, a study in East Asian individuals discovered four SNPs (rs16849225, rs16998073, rs1173766, and rs2681472) for both BP and CAD20. These findings indicated that related traits may share common genetic mechanisms. Despite numerous various GWASs have been successfully applied in identifying large number of SNPs associated with CAD or BP, these SNPs only explain a small proportion of the heritability of two traits. Although GWAS studies may increase statistical power in larger samples, it is often not feasible since the traditional GWAS methods is too costly.
To explain a greater proportion of genetic mechanisms in the pathogenesis of CAD and BP, further innovative analytical methods are required to discover novel SNPs or genes, especially novel overlapped genetic variants. As a recently developed analytical method, the conditional false discovery rate (cFDR)16,17,18, only demands summary statistics results of independent GWAS datasets of correlated traits/diseases. Based on genetic pleiotropy, statistical power and identification of genetic loci will be greatly improved by incorporation two GWAS datasets. This method has been successfully applied to a number of diseases and phenotypes, including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder16, blood pressure and associated phenotypes17, and schizophrenia and cardiovascular-disease risk factors18. In addition, the cFDR has recently been applied by our group to the joint analysis of type 2 diabetes and birth weight21, height and femoral neck bone mineral density22, CAD and bone mineral density23.
In this study, to further exploring the genetic architecture and potential etiology of CAD and BP, the cFDR approach was utilized in two large and existing datasets14,19 for two traits to detect novel common variants and pleiotropic susceptibility loci. We hope to improve SNP detection by cFDR and obtain some novel insights into the unknown shared biological mechanisms between them.
Results
Estimation of pleiotropic enrichment
A significant pleiotropic enrichment was shown in stratified Q-Q (Fig. 1) and TDR plots (Fig. S1). As reflected in Fig. 1A for CAD conditioned on DBP, the great spacing (leftward shifts) between different stratified Q-Q curves indicated strong level of enrichment and great proportion of true associations for any given CAD nominal P-values. The conditional Q-Q plot for DBP conditional on CAD (Fig. 1B) showed some pleiotropic enrichment across various levels of significance for CAD. In Fig. 1C,D, similar results with Fig. 1A were obtained.
Based on the fold-enrichment plots, we observed approximately an 18-fold increase for CAD and DBP (Fig. 2A,B) in the proportion of SNPs reaching the genome wide significance level of −log10(P) > 7.3 when comparing the subset with the most stringent conditional association (P = 1 × 10−4) to the group with all SNPs (P = 1). An 18-fold increase was also observed for CAD conditional on SBP (Fig. 2C). In Fig. 2D, about 16-fold increase was observed for SBP.
CAD loci identified with cFDR
Based on the enrichment of pleiotropic effect between CAD and BP in step one, we performed the cFDR analysis on them to investigate which variants were related to CAD and BP.
Conditional on their association with DBP, 42 SNPs associated with CAD were detected (Table S2 and Fig. S2A) with cFDR < 0.05, which were located on 14 chromosomes. Conditional on their association with SBP, 44 SNPs for CAD were discovered (Table S3 and Fig. S2B), which were mapped to 15 different chromosomes. Total of 55 independent SNPs (which were annotated to 67 genes) related to CAD were identified. Ten loci (rs964184, rs10774625, rs10744777, rs9515203, rs4773144, rs11617955, rs17514846, rs2252641, rs7651039 and rs9381462) of these SNPs reached genome-wide significance at 5 × 10−8 in the original and previous CAD related GWASs (Table S4)7,19,24. 20 SNPs were in high linkage disequilibrium (LD) (R2 > 0.6) with other CAD-associated SNPs reported previously (Table S5) and the rest 25 novel SNPs were not previously reported in original CAD-related GWASs or any other CAD studies. For the 66 genes annotated by these SNPs, 28 genes were previously reported in CAD GWASs7,24,25,26. Among all the 55 independent loci for CAD, most of the genes were enriched in CAD-related terms such as “multicellular organism development”, “response to growth factor” and “organelle lumen”. Detailed information of GO term enrichment analysis was shown in Table 1.
BP loci identified with cFDR
We detected 28 SNPs associated with DBP given their association with CAD (Table S6 and Fig. S2C), which were located on 10 chromosomes. And 33 SNPs for SBP were discovered (Table S7 and Fig. S2D), which were mapped to 15 different chromosomes. Total of 47 independent BP-SNPs (which were annotated to 66 genes) were identified (Table S8). Eleven SNPs were previously reported associated with SBP/DBP in diverse ancestry27,28. 18 SNPs were in high LD (R2 > 0.6) with other BP-associated SNPs reported previously (Table S9) and the rest 18 novel SNPs were not reported in the previous BP-related GWASs or any other BP studies. For the 67genes annotated by these SNPs, 32 of these genes were previously reported for BP in GWASs10,27,28,29,30,31,32. Among the 47 BP-related loci, some of the genes were enriched in BP-related terms such as “circulatory system development”, “regulation of cellular metabolic process” and “protein binding”. Detailed information of GO term analysis was shown in Table 1.
Pleiotropic loci for both CAD and BP
The ccFDR analysis detected 16 pleiotropic SNPs that were associated with both CAD and DBP (Fig. 3A and Table S10). And 19 pleiotropic SNPs related to both CAD and SBP were detected (Fig. 3B and Table S11). Total of 25 independent pleiotropic SNPs associated with both CAD and BP were identified (Table 2). 12 of 25 SNPs were confirmed to be related to both traits and other 13 SNPs were novel pleiotropic variants. Four SNPs of which (rs7902587, rs10744777, rs4678408 and rs998584) were reported to be associated with thyroid cancer, ischemic stroke, type 2 diabetes and body mass index in previous GWASs31,33,34,35,36. For the 32 genes the detected pleiotropic SNPs were annotated to, 12 genes (SLK, PLEKHA7, ATXN2, CUX2, COL4A2, FURIN, CFDP1, TEX41, FGD5, MRAS, VEGFA, CDKN2B-AS1) were previously reported for both traits10,19,24,28,29. Most of the pleiotropic SNPs were resided in the intronic (60%) and intergenic (36%) regions while only one was located in the untranslated regions (4%). Of the detected 25 pleiotropic loci, most of the genes were enriched in CAD and BP related terms such as “cell communication”, “response to growth factor”, and “positive regulation of metabolic process”. Detailed information of GO term analysis was shown in Table 1.
Replication analysis
To address the possibility that the observed pattern of enrichment may result from spurious associations, we performed a replication analysis (Tables S12–S14). First, we observed a similar pleiotropic enrichment pattern by the stratified Q-Q plots in replication analysis (Fig. S3). In the discovery phase of analysis, we detected 55 and 47 variants associated with CAD and BP, respectively. In replication analysis, we replicated 7 and 15 variants associated with CAD and BP, respectively (Table S4 and Table S8). For the pleiotropic loci which related to both traits, 5 SNPs and 8 genes were replicated (Table 2, Fig. 3C,D). These results showed that the pleiotropic enrichment between BP and CAD was largely consistent and some common variants can be replicated across studies.
Discussion
By applying the cFDR approach on GWAS summary statistics of CAD and BP, we found and replicated the enrichment of pleiotropic effect between CAD and BP. Combining these two CAD and BP GWAS samples could improve identification of common variants associated with two phenotypes by increasing statistical power. Andreassen et al.’s study demonstrated the cFDR resulted of the number of SNPs can in an increase of 15–20 times. Using traditional FDR methods in the separate GWAS studies, 25 and 29 genetic variants were discovered for CAD and BP, respectively. Adopting the pleiotropy-informed cFDR method, we identified a total of 55 CAD susceptibility SNPs and 47 SNPs in BP, among of them 30 CAD-associated SNPs and 29 BP-associated SNPs were verification in the original or previous CAD/BP-related studies. Moreover, this method enables identification of shared loci associated with both CAD and BP by leveraging the pleiotropic polygenic effects. Total of 25 pleiotropic SNPs (which were annotated to 32 genes) were discovered through ccFDR analysis, among which 13 were novel.
The novel findings may lead us to a better understanding of the overlapping genetic mechanisms and common etiology between these related traits in different gene regions. Seven novel pleiotropic genes including NME9, NPR3, BAG6, CACNB2, PTPN11, HIBADH and BCAR1 were all related to SBP and DBP in previous GWASs28,30,31,32. PABPC1P2 was associated with schizophrenia and OBFC1 as a locus involved in human leukocyte telomere biology in previous GWASs37,38. ALDH2 and EVX1 were associated with interaction of SBP and alcohol consumption39. Six novel pleiotropic genes (LINC01512, LY6G6C, LOC340113, GUCY1B3, GUCY1A3 and LOC646736) were not reported in any diseases/traits GWASs previously. As examples, we will discuss two of these genes PECAM1 and ERP29 for their potential functional relevance.
The pleiotropic SNP rs2812 was located in the untranslated region (UTR) of platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 gene (PECAM1), which was associated with CAD in GWAS consisting of both European and South Asians population25. The knockdown of PECAM1 in a mice model could reduce cell-cell contacts, which suggested PECAM1 participated in regulation of flow-stimulated Gab1 (Grb2-associated binder-1) tyrosine phosphorylation and signal transduction of cell by Gab1-eNOS pathway40. In another study, Gab1 tyrosine phosphorylation exerted a key role in promoting angiogenesis and regulating endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS) activation41. Moreover, endothelial cells (ECs) were determinants of inflammation and some enhancers in ECs are related to CAD. Dynamic endothelial enhancer elements improved understanding of vascular inflammatory diseases42. The eNOS inactivation is an important characterize of endothelial dysfunction. Endothelial dysfunction is a common mechanism that can lead to several cardiovascular diseases, including atherosclerosis, CAD and hypertension43,44,45. Taken together, PECAM1 may contribute to the development of CAD and BP via PECAM1-Gab1-eNOS pathway.
SNP rs4767293 was located in the intergenic region between NAA25 and endoplasmic reticulum protein 29 gene (ERP29). NAA25 and ERP29 were associated with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), which include Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis46. Several epidemiology studies suggested that IBDs were potential risk factors for cardiovascular diseases47,48,49. Additionally, IBDs are chronic inflammatory diseases, later stage of which could contribute to endothelial dysfunction and platelet aggregation in artery blood vessels50. ERP29 was localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and expressed among various tissues and cell types that included N-terminal and C-terminal domains51. Furthermore, ERP29 is a tumor suppressor gene via ERP29-MGMT (O6-methylguanine DNA-methyltransferase) axis to exert the function of radioresistant in MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells52. ERP29 was involved in the formation of epithelial cells by junction transmembrane proteins, and regulation of the epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) in epithelial cells to influence cancer progression53,54. A recent study showed that pigment epithelium-derived factor by suppressing Wnt/β-catenin pathway to reduce endothelial cell injury so as to prevent the formation of atherosclerosis55. However, to our knowledge the relational pathways for IBD and CAD are still largely unknown, which required to further explore in future studies.
There are several advantages in this study. First, through the incorporation of two GWAS datasets expanded the sample size and increased the statistical power, which contributed to successful discovery of novel SNPs for CAD and BP. Second, both datasets were all European individuals in this study. We analyzed both two phenotypes novel genetic variants to improve understanding of genetic relationship in CAD and BP. The findings were also partially validated by GO terms analysis and some variants were also further replicated to be associated with CAD or BP in the replication analysis. Third, we investigated and identified 25 shared common variants in CAD and BP (including SBP and DBP), while the etiology mechanisms of CAD and DBP were ignored in most previous studies. However, there are some limitations for this study. First, we did not replicate all the variants in C4D datasets, possibly due to the C4D dataset was derived from a meta-analysis of only four GWAS of European and South Asian descent. Second, some individuals were overlapped between two datasets, which might lead to increase of false positive rate. To minimize this error, the high LD of SNPs were considered to be replicated/reported. Third, the existing method of GWAS studies cannot be compared with the cFDR approach due to lack of the raw genotype and phenotype data for both traits.
In conclusion, this study showed the high availability of cFDR method in improving identification of genetic loci by incorporating two datasets of related traits. We found high pleiotropic enrichment between CAD and BP and identified several novel pleiotropic loci for both traits. The novel susceptibility loci may provide us novel implications in potential shared genetic mechanistic between these two phenotypes.
Materials and Methods
GWASs datasets
The GWAS datasets for CAD and BP were acquired from publicly available websites. The BP dataset was performed by the International Consortium for Blood Pressure Genome-Wide Association Studies (ICBP) and downloaded from https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v478/n7367/full/nature10405.html#group-1. This GWAS meta-analysis contains association summary statistics for 69,395 individuals of European ancestry. Two CAD datasets were downloaded from http://www.cardiogramplusc4d.org/data-downloads/. The CARDIoGRAM dataset was performed by Coronary Artery Disease Genome-Wide Replication and Meta-Analysis consortium, which is a meta-analysis of 14 GWASs of CAD contains association summary statistics for European ancestry of 22,233 cases and 64,762 controls. The C4D dataset performed by the Coronary Artery Disease (C4D) Genetics Consortium was derived from a meta-analysis of four large GWAS of European and South Asian descent involving 15,420 cases and 15,062 controls. All datasets both provide summary statistics for each SNP and its corresponding P-value after adopting genomic control both at individual study level and after meta-analysis. Furthermore, the C4D dataset in our analysis was used as the replication dataset. More details about recruitment, phenotyping, genotyping and association analyses were described in the original GWASs publications14,19,25. Contributing studies received ethical approval from their respective institutional review boards.
Data preparation
Before the analysis, we checked overlapping samples included in these datasets of the cohorts. We found 1,121 individuals were overlapped between CARDIoGRAM and ICBP datasets, and no overlapped individuals between CARDIoGRAM and C4D datasets (Table S1). Genomic control (GC) corrections has been applied in those original datasets at the individual study level and for the meta-analysis to ensure the variance estimation for each SNP would not be inflated due to population heterogeneity56.
Statistical analysis
All cFDR analysis was performed in “GWAScFDR” packages of R software 3.43. The “ggplot2” and “Rmanhattanplot” packages were used to conduct stratified Q-Q plots, fold-enrichment plots and Manhattan plots. Using this approach, we obtained four look-up tables–cFDR results for CAD conditioned on SBP/DBP and vice versa. We identified loci associated with BP and CAD (cFDR < 0.05) using these tables.
Stratified Q-Q and enrichment plots for pleiotropic enrichment estimation
The stratified Q-Q plot was used to assess the pleiotropic enrichment of genetic loci between both traits. The stratified Q-Q plots usually present the nominal P-value (−log10(p)) on the y-axis, denoted by “p” against the empirical quantiles (−log10(q)) on the x-axis, here denoted by “q”. Stratified Q–Q plots were constructed by nominal P-value of the principal trait SNPs conditional on SNPs associated with the second phenotype at varying levels. The pleiotropy enrichment can be seen from the degree of leftward shift from the expected null line as the principal trait is successively conditioned on different significance levels of the second phenotype. If pleiotropic enrichment does exist, an earlier leftward shift from the null line will be present. Greater spacing between stratified Q–Q curves visually indicates a higher level of pleiotropic enrichment between two traits. Pleiotropic enrichment can also be interpreted in terms of stratified true discovery rate (TDR) plots (equivalent to 1-FDR) (Fig. S1). Stratified TDR plots illustrating the increase in TDR associated with increased pleiotropic enrichment. The conservatively estimated FDR is directly related to the horizontal shift of the curves from the cut off line x = y in the stratified Q-Q plots, with a larger shift corresponding to a smaller FDR.
In order to check whether the pleiotropic effect enrichment was consistent, we conducted a replication analysis. CARDIoGRAM dataset for CAD was used as a discovery dataset for cFDR and conjunction FDR analyses with BP, the C4D dataset was independent of CARDIoGRAM for the replication analysis.
To confirm the enrichment effects, fold-enrichment plots were conducted. We present fold-enrichment plots of nominal −log10(P) values for CAD SNPs below the standard GWAS threshold of P < 5 × 10−8 and for subsets of SNPs determined by the significance of their association with DBP/SBP and vice versa. Fold-enrichment is assessed by the degree of upward shift from the null line.
cFDR and conditional Manhattan plots
In order to improve detection of additional SNPs associated with CAD and BP, the cFDR was computed for each SNP where CAD was the principal trait conditioned on the BP-related SNPs. Ole A. Andreassen et al. define the conditional FDR as the posterior probability that a given SNP is null for the first phenotype given that the p-values for both phenotypes are as small or smaller as the observed p-values. cFDR was expressed as:
To visualize the localization of SNPs associated with CAD given their association with BP, conditional Manhattan plots was constructed to mark the significant SNPs and their chromosomal locations. The 22 chromosomal locations are plotted on the x-axis, and the −log10(FDR) CAD values conditional on DBP/SBP are plotted on the y-axis and vice versa for BP. As illustrated in Figs S2A and S2B for CAD conditional on DBP/SBP, the small points shown above the red line (−log10 cFDR > 1.3, i.e. cFDR < 0.05) represent the SNPs for CAD. A similar procedure was used in the conditional Manhattan plots for BP given CAD (Figs S2C and S2D).
Conjunction statistics and conjunction Manhattan plots
In order to discover the pleiotropic SNPs associated with both CAD and BP, the conjunctional cFDR (ccFDR) was calculated, which is defined as the posterior probability that a given SNP is null for both phenotypes simultaneously when the P-values for both phenotypes are as small or smaller than the observed P-values, and given by
To visualize the localization of the significant pleiotropic SNPs, ccFDR Manhattan plots were constructed. As illustrated in Fig. 3, the SNPs shown above the red line (ccFDR < 0.05) were SNPs for both CAD and BP.
Functional term enrichment analysis
Function term enrichment analysis was performed in the gene ontology (GO) terms database (http://geneontology.org/) to describe the biological functions of individual traits related loci57. All significant genes were annotated by using three main categories (biological processes, cellular component and molecular functions) to evaluate biological knowledge. This analysis provided comprehensive biological information to partially validate our findings by determining specific genes that are enriched in CAD- and BP-related GO terms.
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Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the Key Scientific Research Projects of Colleges and Universities (Grant NO: 19A330005) and the Key Research and Development and Promotion Projects (Grant NO: 192102310191) in Henan of China. The funders had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Meanwhile, the authors would like to thank the participants, the coordinators, and administrators for their supports during the study.
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Chang-Qing Sun conceived and designed the study. Xiang-Jie Mao as the first author performed data analysis and wrote the manuscript. Qiang Zhang performed data analysis and gave constructive suggestions as well as provided revisions for this manuscript. Fei Xu, Pan Gao, Nan Sun, Bo Wang and Qi-Xin Tang were revised the grammatical errors and provided some suggestions. Yi-Bin Hao reviewed the manuscript and made some contribution to the two revisions.
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Mao, XJ., Zhang, Q., Xu, F. et al. Improved detection of common variants in coronary artery disease and blood pressure using a pleiotropy cFDR method. Sci Rep 9, 10340 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-46808-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-46808-2
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