Heritability and Genome-Wide Linkage in US and Australian Twins Identify Novel Genomic Regions Controlling Chromogranin A
Male
0301 basic medicine
Genetic Linkage
Genome, Human
Chromaffin Cells
Australia
Chromosome Mapping
Genetic Variation
Blood Pressure
Environment
Middle Aged
Exocytosis
Peptide Fragments
Proton-Translocating ATPases
03 medical and health sciences
Quantitative Trait, Heritable
Hypertension
Chromogranin A
Humans
Female
Alleles
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17
DOI:
10.1161/circulationaha.107.709105
Publication Date:
2008-07-01T00:54:19Z
AUTHORS (17)
ABSTRACT
Background—
Chromogranin A (CHGA) triggers catecholamine secretory granule biogenesis, and its catestatin fragment inhibits catecholamine release. We approached catestatin heritability using twin pairs, coupled with genome-wide linkage, in a series of twin and sibling pairs from 2 continents.
Methods and Results—
Hypertensive patients had elevated CHGA coupled with reduction in catestatin, suggesting diminished conversion of precursor to catestatin. Heritability for catestatin in twins was 44% to 60%. Six hundred fifteen nuclear families yielded 870 sib pairs for linkage, with significant logarithm of odds peaks on chromosomes 4p, 4q, and 17q. Because acidification of catecholamine secretory vesicles determines CHGA trafficking and processing to catestatin, we genotyped at positional candidate
ATP6N1
, bracketed by peak linkage markers on chromosome 17q, encoding a subunit of vesicular H
+
-translocating ATPase. The minor allele diminished CHGA secretion and processing to catestatin. The
ATP6N1
variant also influenced blood pressure in 1178 individuals with the most extreme blood pressure values in the population. In chromaffin cells, inhibition of H
+
-ATPase diverted CHGA from regulated to constitutive secretory pathways.
Conclusions—
We established heritability of catestatin in twins from 2 continents. Linkage identified 3 regions contributing to catestatin, likely novel determinants of sympathochromaffin exocytosis. At 1 such positional candidate (
ATP6N1
), variation influenced CHGA secretion and processing to catestatin, confirming the mechanism of a novel
trans
-QTL for sympathochromaffin activity and blood pressure.
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