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Rare Variants for Hypertension in Taiwan Chinese

$666,085R01FY2014HLNIH

Washington University, Saint Louis MO

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Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Hypertension and its sequelae constitute a major public-health burden and, therefore-, identification of the causal variants for hypertension could lead to the development of novel interventions to control or treat the adverse outcomes. Although Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) have successfully identified 29 common variants for hypertension, their effects collectively explain less than 2.5% of blood pressure (BP) variance, with most of the heritability still missing. We propose a comprehensive study to identify rare and low frequency variants with supposedly larger effects for hypertension and high BP in highly enriched Taiwan Chinese hypertensive families using whole exome sequencing and state-of-the-art statistical methods. The SAPPHIRe Network in the Family Blood Pressure Program (FBPP) recruited Taiwan families with multiple hypertensive sibs. Thus, by the very design of the study, the family sample is highly enriched with hypertension and BP segregating variants. We show that this type of recruitment and further selection of a subset of the families with strong linkage evidence vastly enriches rare and low frequency variants for hypertension/BP by several fold as compared to the general population. Therefore, we propose to carry out exome sequencing in 150 highly enriched Taiwan sib-pairs (300 subjects) and 300 unrelated controls from Taiwan, and genotype the top 6,000 SNPs in all SAPPHIRe families (N=1,200) and 1,200 unrelated matched controls. Finally, the 50 variants most associated with hypertension/BP will then be replicated in large multi- ethnic cohorts, including Chinese and U.S. populations, with nearly 45,000 subjects. This study can potentially explain a large proportion of the missing heritability, which could then lead to important translational research o considerable public health significance. Therefore, the potential impact is very high.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →