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GWAS Study

Gene by stress genome-wide interaction analysis and path analysis identify EBF1 as a cardiovascular and metabolic risk gene.

Singh A, Babyak MA, Nolan DK et al.

25271088 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
8962 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SA
Singh A
BM
Babyak MA
ND
Nolan DK
BB
Brummett BH
JR
Jiang R
SI
Siegler IC
KW
Kraus WE
SS
Shah SH
WR
Williams RB
HE
Hauser ER
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

We performed gene-environment interaction genome-wide association analysis (G × E GWAS) to identify SNPs whose effects on metabolic traits are modified by chronic psychosocial stress in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). In Whites, the G × E GWAS for hip circumference identified five SNPs within the Early B-cell Factor 1 (EBF1) gene, all of which were in strong linkage disequilibrium. The gene-by-stress interaction (SNP × STRESS) term P-values were genome-wide significant (Ps = 7.14E-09 to 2.33E-08, uncorrected; Ps = 1.99E-07 to 5.18E-07, corrected for genomic control). The SNP-only (without interaction) model P-values (Ps = 0.011-0.022) were not significant at the conventional genome-wide significance level. Further analysis of related phenotypes identified gene-by-stress interaction effects for waist circumference, body mass index (BMI), fasting glucose, type II diabetes status, and common carotid intimal-medial thickness (CCIMT), supporting a proposed model of gene-by-stress interaction that connects cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factor endophenotypes such as central obesity and increased blood glucose or diabetes to CVD itself. Structural equation path analysis suggested that the path from chronic psychosocial stress to CCIMT via hip circumference and fasting glucose was larger (estimate = 0.26, P = 0.033, 95% CI = 0.02-0.49) in the EBF1 rs4704963 CT/CC genotypes group than the same path in the TT group (estimate = 0.004, P = 0.34, 95% CI = -0.004-0.012). We replicated the association of the EBF1 SNPs and hip circumference in the Framingham Offspring Cohort (gene-by-stress term P-values = 0.007-0.012) as well as identified similar path relationships. This observed and replicated interaction between psychosocial stress and variation in the EBF1 gene may provide a biological hypothesis for the complex relationship between psychosocial stress, central obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.

2,460 European ancestry individuals, 548 Chinese ancestry individuals, 1,547 African American individuals, 1,250 Hispanic individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

8962
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
3,157 European ancestry individuals
Replication Participants
Hispanic or Latin American, European, African American or Afro-Caribbean, East Asian
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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