PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Analysis of gene-gene interactions among common variants in candidate cardiovascular genes in coronary artery disease.

  • Muntaser D Musameh,
  • William Y S Wang,
  • Christopher P Nelson,
  • Carla Lluís-Ganella,
  • Radoslaw Debiec,
  • Isaac Subirana,
  • Roberto Elosua,
  • Anthony J Balmforth,
  • Stephen G Ball,
  • Alistair S Hall,
  • Sekar Kathiresan,
  • John R Thompson,
  • Gavin Lucas,
  • Nilesh J Samani,
  • Maciej Tomaszewski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. e0117684

Abstract

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Only a small fraction of coronary artery disease (CAD) heritability has been explained by common variants identified to date. Interactions between genes of importance to cardiovascular regulation may account for some of the missing heritability of CAD. This study aimed to investigate the role of gene-gene interactions in common variants in candidate cardiovascular genes in CAD.2,101 patients with CAD from the British Heart Foundation Family Heart Study and 2,426 CAD-free controls were included in the discovery cohort. All subjects were genotyped with the Illumina HumanCVD BeadChip enriched for genes and pathways relevant to the cardiovascular system and disease. The primary analysis in the discovery cohort examined pairwise interactions among 913 common (minor allele frequency >0.1) independent single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with at least nominal association with CAD in single locus analysis. A secondary exploratory interaction analysis was performed among all 11,332 independent common SNPs surviving quality control criteria. Replication analyses were conducted in 2,967 patients and 3,075 controls from the Myocardial Infarction Genetics Consortium. None of the interactions amongst 913 SNPs analysed in the primary analysis was statistically significant after correction for multiple testing (required P 1.7 for common variants in the primary analysis.Moderately large additive interactions between common SNPs in genes relevant to cardiovascular disease do not appear to play a major role in genetic predisposition to CAD. The role of genetic interactions amongst less common SNPs and with medium and small magnitude effects remain to be investigated.