Genome-Wide Interaction Analyses of Serum Calcium on Ventricular Repolarization Time in 125 393 Participants
Young, William J.; van der Most, Peter J.; Bartz, Traci M.; Bos, Maxime M.; Biino, Ginevra; Duong, Thuyvy; Foco, Luisa; Lominchar, Jesus T.; Müller-Nurasyid, Martina; Nardone, Giuseppe Giovanni; Pecori, Alessandro; Ramirez, Julia; Repetto, Linda; Schramm, Katharina; Shen, Xia; van Duijvenboden, Stefan; van Heemst, Diana; Weiss, Stefan; Yao, Jie; Benjamins, Jan Walter; Alonso, Alvaro; Spedicati, Beatrice; Biggs, Mary L.; Brody, Jennifer A.; Dörr, Marcus; Fuchsberger, Christian; Gögele, Martin; Guo, Xiuqing; Ikram, M. Arfan; Jukema, J. Wouter; Kääb, Stefan; Kanters, Jørgen K.; Lin, Henry J.; Linneberg, Allan; Nauck, Matthias; Nolte, Ilja M.; Pianigiani, Giulia; Santin, Aurora; Soliman, Elsayed Z.; Tesolin, Paola; Vaccargiu, Simona; Waldenberger, Melanie; van der Harst, Pim; Verweij, Niek; Arking, Dan E.; Concas, Maria Pina; De Grandi, Alessandro; Girotto, Giorgia; Grarup, Niels; Kavousi, Maryam; Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O.; Navarro, Pau; Orini, Michele; Padmanabhan, Sandosh; Pattaro, Cristian; Peters, Annette; Pirastu, Mario; Pramstaller, Peter P.; Heckbert, Susan R.; Sinner, Mortiz; Snieder, Harold; Völker, Uwe; Wilson, James F.; Gauderman, W. James; Lambiase, Pier D.; Sotoodehnia, Nona; Tinker, Andrew; Warren, Helen R.; Noordam, Raymond; Munroe, Patricia B.
(2024) Journal of the American Heart Association, volume 13, issue 17
(Article)
Abstract
Ventricular repolarization time (ECG QT and JT intervals) is associated with malignant arrhythmia. Genome-wide association studies have identified 230 independent loci for QT and JT; however, 50% of their heritability remains unexplained. Previous work supports a causal effect of lower serum calcium concentrations on longer ventricular repolarization time. We hypothesized
... read more
calcium interactions with QT and JT variant associations could explain a proportion of the missing heritability. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed genome-wide calcium interaction analyses for QT and JT intervals. Participants were stratified by their calcium level relative to the study distribution (top or bottom 20%). We performed a 2-stage analysis (genome-wide discovery [N=62 532] and replication [N=59 861] of lead variants) and a single-stage genome-wide meta-analysis (N=122 393, [European ancestry N=117 581, African ancestry N=4812]). We also calculated 2-degrees of freedom joint main and interaction and 1-degree of freedom interaction P values. In 2-stage and single-stage analyses, 50 and 98 independent loci, respectively, were associated with either QT or JT intervals (2-degrees of freedom joint main and interaction P value <5×10−8). No lead variant had a significant interaction result after correcting for multiple testing and sensitivity analyses provided similar findings. Two loci in the single-stage meta-analysis were not reported previously (SPPL2B and RFX6). CONCLUSIONS: We have found limited support for an interaction effect of serum calcium on QT and JT variant associations despite sample sizes with suitable power to detect relevant effects. Therefore, such effects are unlikely to explain a meaningful proportion of the heritability of QT and JT, and factors including rare variation and other environmental interactions need to be considered.
show less
Download/Full Text
Keywords: calcium, ECG intervals, gene-lifestyle interaction, genome-wide association study, ventricular repolarization, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
ISSN: 2047-9980
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Note: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s).
(Peer reviewed)