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Genetics of venous thrombosis: insights from a new genome wide association study
Authors:Germain Marine  Saut Noémie  Greliche Nicolas  Dina Christian  Lambert Jean-Charles  Perret Claire  Cohen William  Oudot-Mellakh Tiphaine  Antoni Guillemette  Alessi Marie-Christine  Zelenika Diana  Cambien François  Tiret Laurence  Bertrand Marion  Dupuy Anne-Marie  Letenneur Luc  Lathrop Mark  Emmerich Joseph  Amouyel Philippe  Trégouët David-Alexandre  Morange Pierre-Emmanuel
Institution:INSERM UMR_S 937; ICAN Institute, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 6, Paris, France.
Abstract:

Background

Venous Thrombosis (VT) is a common multifactorial disease associated with a major public health burden. Genetics factors are known to contribute to the susceptibility of the disease but how many genes are involved and their contribution to VT risk still remain obscure. We aimed to identify genetic variants associated with VT risk.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) based on 551,141 SNPs genotyped in 1,542 cases and 1,110 controls. Twelve SNPs reached the genome-wide significance level of 2.0×10−8 and encompassed four known VT-associated loci, ABO, F5, F11 and FGG. By means of haplotype analyses, we also provided novel arguments in favor of a role of HIVEP1, PROCR and STAB2, three loci recently hypothesized to participate in the susceptibility to VT. However, no novel VT-associated loci came out of our GWAS. Using a recently proposed statistical methodology, we also showed that common variants could explain about 35% of the genetic variance underlying VT susceptibility among which 3% could be attributable to the main identified VT loci. This analysis additionally suggested that the common variants left to be identified are not uniformly distributed across the genome and that chromosome 20, itself, could contribute to ∼7% of the total genetic variance.

Conclusions/Significance

This study might also provide a valuable source of information to expand our understanding of biological mechanisms regulating quantitative biomarkers for VT.
Keywords:
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