International Epidemiology Institute, Rockville, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(12):e28623. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028623. Epub 2011 Dec 21.
Vitamin D is implicated in a wide range of health outcomes, and although environmental predictors of vitamin D levels are known, the genetic drivers of vitamin D status remain to be clarified. African Americans are a group at particularly high risk for vitamin D insufficiency but to date have been virtually absent from studies of genetic predictors of circulating vitamin D levels. Within the Southern Community Cohort Study, we investigated the association between 94 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in five vitamin D pathway genes (GC, VDR, CYP2R1, CYP24A1, CYP27B1) and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels among 379 African American and 379 Caucasian participants. We found statistically significant associations with three SNPs (rs2298849 and rs2282679 in the GC gene, and rs10877012 in the CYP27B1 gene), although only for African Americans. A genotype score, representing the number of risk alleles across the three SNPs, alone accounted for 4.6% of the variation in serum vitamin D among African Americans. A genotype score of 5 (vs. 1) was also associated with a 7.1 ng/mL reduction in serum 25(OH)D levels and a six-fold risk of vitamin D insufficiency (<20 ng/mL) (odds ratio 6.0, p = 0.01) among African Americans. With African ancestry determined from a panel of 276 ancestry informative SNPs, we found that high risk genotypes did not cluster among those with higher African ancestry. This study is one of the first to investigate common genetic variation in relation to vitamin D levels in African Americans, and the first to evaluate how vitamin D-associated genotypes vary in relation to African ancestry. These results suggest that further evaluation of genetic contributors to vitamin D status among African Americans may help provide insights regarding racial health disparities or enable the identification of subgroups especially in need of vitamin D-related interventions.
维生素 D 与广泛的健康结果有关,尽管已经知道了影响维生素 D 水平的环境预测因子,但维生素 D 状态的遗传驱动因素仍有待阐明。非裔美国人是维生素 D 不足的高风险人群,但迄今为止,他们几乎没有出现在与循环维生素 D 水平相关的遗传预测因子的研究中。在南方社区队列研究中,我们研究了五个维生素 D 途径基因(GC、VDR、CYP2R1、CYP24A1、CYP27B1)中的 94 个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)与 379 名非裔美国人和 379 名白种人参与者血清 25-羟维生素 D(25(OH)D)水平之间的关联。我们发现了三个 SNP(GC 基因中的 rs2298849 和 rs2282679,以及 CYP27B1 基因中的 rs10877012)与统计学显著相关,但仅在非裔美国人中如此。一个代表三个 SNP 中风险等位基因数量的基因型评分单独解释了非裔美国人血清维生素 D 变异的 4.6%。与基因型评分 1 相比,评分 5(5 个风险等位基因)与血清 25(OH)D 水平降低 7.1ng/ml 以及维生素 D 不足(<20ng/ml)的风险增加六倍(比值比 6.0,p=0.01)相关。根据 276 个祖先信息 SNP 组成的面板确定非裔祖先,我们发现高风险基因型并未聚集在那些具有更高非裔祖先的个体中。这项研究是首批调查非裔美国人维生素 D 水平与常见遗传变异关系的研究之一,也是首次评估与维生素 D 相关的基因型如何与非裔祖先有关。这些结果表明,进一步评估非裔美国人维生素 D 状态的遗传因素可能有助于提供有关种族健康差异的见解,或有助于确定特别需要维生素 D 相关干预的亚组。