Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (May 2024)

Causal role of immune cells in hypertension: a bidirectional Mendelian randomization study

  • Xinhe Zhang,
  • Xinhe Zhang,
  • Xinhe Zhang,
  • Guanying Li,
  • Wei Wu,
  • Bin Li,
  • Bin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2024.1375704
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundAlthough Hypertension (HTN) is considered to be a cardiovascular disease caused by multiple factors, the cause of it is still unknown. In this study, we aim to find out whether circulating immune cell characteristics have an impact on susceptibility to HTN.MethodsThis study employed a comprehensive two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the causal association between immune cell characteristics and HTN. Utilizing publicly accessible genetic data, we examined the causal relationship between HTN and the susceptibility to 731 immune cell signatures. To ensure the reliability and validity of the findings, a comprehensive sensitivity analysis was conducted to assess heterogeneity, confirm the robustness of the results and evaluate the presence of horizontal pleiotropy.ResultsAfter FDR correction, immune phenotype had an effect on HTN. In our study, one immunophenotype was identified as being positively associated with HTN risk significance: HLA DR on CD33- HLA DR+. In addition, we examined 8 immune phenotype with no statistically significant effect of HTN, but it is worth mentioning that they had an unadjusted low P-value phenotype.ConclusionsOur MR study by genetic means demonstrated the close relationship between HTN and immune cells, thus providing guidance for future clinical prediction and subsequent treatment of HTN.

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