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Associations of variants In the hexokinase 1 and interleukin 18 receptor regions with oxyhemoglobin saturation during sleep.

Brian E CadeHan-Yang ChenAdrienne M StilpTin LouieSonia Ancoli-IsraelRaanan ArensRichard BarfieldJennifer E BelowJianwen CaiMatthew P ConomosDaniel S EvansAlexis C Frazier-WoodSina A GharibKevin J GleasonDaniel J GottliebDavid R HillmanW Craig JohnsonDavid J LedererJiwon LeeJose S LoredoHao MeiSutapa MukherjeeSanjay R PatelWendy S PostShaun M PurcellAlberto R RamosKathryn J ReidKen RiceNeomi A ShahTamar SoferKent D TaylorTimothy A ThorntonHeming WangKristine YaffePhyllis C ZeeCraig L HanisLyle J PalmerJerome I RotterKatie L StoneGregory J TranahJames G WilsonShamil R SunyaevCathy C LaurieXiaofeng ZhuRicha SaxenaXihong LinSusan Redline
Published in: PLoS genetics (2019)
Sleep disordered breathing (SDB)-related overnight hypoxemia is associated with cardiometabolic disease and other comorbidities. Understanding the genetic bases for variations in nocturnal hypoxemia may help understand mechanisms influencing oxygenation and SDB-related mortality. We conducted genome-wide association tests across 10 cohorts and 4 populations to identify genetic variants associated with three correlated measures of overnight oxyhemoglobin saturation: average and minimum oxyhemoglobin saturation during sleep and the percent of sleep with oxyhemoglobin saturation under 90%. The discovery sample consisted of 8,326 individuals. Variants with p < 1 × 10(-6) were analyzed in a replication group of 14,410 individuals. We identified 3 significantly associated regions, including 2 regions in multi-ethnic analyses (2q12, 10q22). SNPs in the 2q12 region associated with minimum SpO2 (rs78136548 p = 2.70 × 10(-10)). SNPs at 10q22 were associated with all three traits including average SpO2 (rs72805692 p = 4.58 × 10(-8)). SNPs in both regions were associated in over 20,000 individuals and are supported by prior associations or functional evidence. Four additional significant regions were detected in secondary sex-stratified and combined discovery and replication analyses, including a region overlapping Reelin, a known marker of respiratory complex neurons.These are the first genome-wide significant findings reported for oxyhemoglobin saturation during sleep, a phenotype of high clinical interest. Our replicated associations with HK1 and IL18R1 suggest that variants in inflammatory pathways, such as the biologically-plausible NLRP3 inflammasome, may contribute to nocturnal hypoxemia.
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