Login / Signup

Biobank-driven genomic discovery yields new insight into atrial fibrillation biology.

Jonas Bille NielsenRosa B ThorolfsdottirLars G FritscheWei ZhouMorten W SkovSarah E GrahamTodd J HerronShane McCarthyEllen M SchmidtGardar SveinbjornssonIda SurakkaMichael R MathisMasatoshi YamazakiRyan D CrawfordMaiken E GabrielsenAnne Heidi SkogholtOddgeir L HolmenMaoxuan LinBrooke N WolfordRounak DeyHåvard DalenPatrick SulemJonathan H ChungJoshua D BackmanDavid O ArnarUnnur ThorsteinsdottirAris BarasColm O'DushlaineAnders G HolstXiaoquan WenWhitney HornsbyFrederick E DeweyMichael BoehnkeSachin KheterpalBhramar MukherjeeSeunggeun LeeHyun M KangHilma HolmJacob KitzmanJordan A ShavitJosé JalifeChad M BrummettTanya M TeslovichDavid J CareyDaníel F GuðbjartssonKari StefanssonGonçalo R AbecasisKristian HveemCristen J Willer
Published in: Nature genetics (2018)
To identify genetic variation underlying atrial fibrillation, the most common cardiac arrhythmia, we performed a genome-wide association study of >1,000,000 people, including 60,620 atrial fibrillation cases and 970,216 controls. We identified 142 independent risk variants at 111 loci and prioritized 151 functional candidate genes likely to be involved in atrial fibrillation. Many of the identified risk variants fall near genes where more deleterious mutations have been reported to cause serious heart defects in humans (GATA4, MYH6, NKX2-5, PITX2, TBX5)1, or near genes important for striated muscle function and integrity (for example, CFL2, MYH7, PKP2, RBM20, SGCG, SSPN). Pathway and functional enrichment analyses also suggested that many of the putative atrial fibrillation genes act via cardiac structural remodeling, potentially in the form of an 'atrial cardiomyopathy'2, either during fetal heart development or as a response to stress in the adult heart.
Keyphrases