Wang Heming, Cade Brian E, Chen Han, Gleason Kevin J, Saxena Richa, Feng Tao, Larkin Emma K, Vasan Ramachandran S, Lin Honghuang, Patel Sanjay R, Tracy Russell P, Liu Yongmei, Gottlieb Daniel J, Below Jennifer E, Hanis Craig L, Petty Lauren E, Sunyaev Shamil R, Frazier-Wood Alexis C, Rotter Jerome I, Post Wendy, Lin Xihong, Redline Susan, Zhu Xiaofeng
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Hum Mol Genet. 2016 Dec 1;25(23):5244-5253. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddw324.
Genetic determinants of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), a common set of disorders that contribute to significant cardiovascular and neuropsychiatric morbidity, are not clear. Overnight nocturnal oxygen saturation (SaO2) is a clinically relevant and easily measured indicator of SDB severity but its genetic contribution has never been studied. Our recent study suggests nocturnal SaO2 is heritable. We performed linkage analysis, association analysis and haplotype analysis of average nocturnal oxyhaemoglobin saturation in participants in the Cleveland Family Study (CFS), followed by gene-based association and additional tests in four independent samples. Linkage analysis identified a peak (LOD = 4.29) on chromosome 8p23. Follow-up association analysis identified two haplotypes in angiopoietin-2 (ANGPT2) that significantly contributed to the variation of SaO2 (P = 8 × 10-5) and accounted for a portion of the linkage evidence. Gene-based association analysis replicated the association of ANGPT2 and nocturnal SaO2. A rare missense SNP rs200291021 in ANGPT2 was associated with serum angiopoietin-2 level (P = 1.29 × 10-4), which was associated with SaO2 (P = 0.002). Our study provides the first evidence for the association of ANGPT2, a gene previously implicated in acute lung injury syndromes, with nocturnal SaO2, suggesting that this gene has a broad range of effects on gas exchange, including influencing oxygenation during sleep.
睡眠呼吸障碍(SDB)是一组常见疾病,会导致严重的心血管和神经精神疾病,但目前尚不清楚其遗传决定因素。夜间血氧饱和度(SaO2)是临床上反映SDB严重程度的一个相关且易于测量的指标,但其遗传贡献从未被研究过。我们最近的研究表明夜间SaO2具有遗传性。我们对克利夫兰家庭研究(CFS)参与者的平均夜间氧合血红蛋白饱和度进行了连锁分析、关联分析和单倍型分析,随后在四个独立样本中进行了基于基因的关联分析和其他测试。连锁分析在8号染色体p23区域发现了一个峰值(LOD = 4.29)。后续的关联分析在血管生成素-2(ANGPT2)中发现了两个单倍型,它们对SaO2的变异有显著贡献(P = 8×10-5),并解释了部分连锁证据。基于基因的关联分析重复了ANGPT2与夜间SaO2的关联。ANGPT2中一个罕见的错义单核苷酸多态性rs200291021与血清血管生成素-2水平相关(P = 1.29×10-4),而血清血管生成素-2水平又与SaO2相关(P = 0.002)。我们的研究首次提供了证据,表明先前与急性肺损伤综合征有关的ANGPT2基因与夜间SaO2相关,这表明该基因对气体交换有广泛影响,包括影响睡眠期间的氧合作用。