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Genetic Variants in the Bone Morphogenic Protein Gene Family Modify the Association between Residential Exposure to Traffic and Peripheral Arterial Disease

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Listed:
  • Cavin K Ward-Caviness
  • Lucas M Neas
  • Colette Blach
  • Carol S Haynes
  • Karen LaRocque-Abramson
  • Elizabeth Grass
  • Elaine Dowdy
  • Robert B Devlin
  • David Diaz-Sanchez
  • Wayne E Cascio
  • Marie Lynn Miranda
  • Simon G Gregory
  • Svati H Shah
  • William E Kraus
  • Elizabeth R Hauser

Abstract

There is a growing literature indicating that genetic variants modify many of the associations between environmental exposures and clinical outcomes, potentially by increasing susceptibility to these exposures. However, genome-scale investigations of these interactions have been rarely performed particularly in the case of air pollution exposures. We performed race-stratified genome-wide gene-environment interaction association studies on European-American (EA, N = 1623) and African-American (AA, N = 554) cohorts to investigate the joint influence of common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and residential exposure to traffic (“traffic exposure”)—a recognized vascular disease risk factor—on peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Traffic exposure was estimated via the distance from the primary residence to the nearest major roadway, defined as the nearest limited access highways or major arterial. The rs755249-traffic exposure interaction was associated with PAD at a genome-wide significant level (P = 2.29x10-8) in European-Americans. Rs755249 is located in the 3’ untranslated region of BMP8A, a member of the bone morphogenic protein (BMP) gene family. Further investigation revealed several variants in BMP genes associated with PAD via an interaction with traffic exposure in both the EA and AA cohorts; this included interactions with non-synonymous variants in BMP2, which is regulated by air pollution exposure. The BMP family of genes is linked to vascular growth and calcification and is a novel gene family for the study of PAD pathophysiology. Further investigation of BMP8A using the Genotype Tissue Expression Database revealed multiple variants with nominally significant (P

Suggested Citation

  • Cavin K Ward-Caviness & Lucas M Neas & Colette Blach & Carol S Haynes & Karen LaRocque-Abramson & Elizabeth Grass & Elaine Dowdy & Robert B Devlin & David Diaz-Sanchez & Wayne E Cascio & Marie Lynn Mi, 2016. "Genetic Variants in the Bone Morphogenic Protein Gene Family Modify the Association between Residential Exposure to Traffic and Peripheral Arterial Disease," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(4), pages 1-20, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0152670
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152670
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