| Literature DB >> 24743898 |
Gad Abraham1, Oneil G Bhalala, Paul I W de Bakker, Samuli Ripatti, Michael Inouye.
Abstract
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a complex disease driven by myriad interactions of genetics and environmental factors. Traditionally, studies have analyzed only 1 disease factor at a time, providing useful but limited understanding of the underlying etiology. Recent advances in cost-effective and high-throughput technologies, such as single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping, exome/genome/RNA sequencing, gene expression microarrays, and metabolomics assays have enabled the collection of millions of data points in many thousands of individuals. In order to make sense of such 'omics' data, effective analytical methods are needed. We review and highlight some of the main results in this area, focusing on integrative approaches that consider multiple modalities simultaneously. Such analyses have the potential to uncover the genetic basis of CAD, produce genomic risk scores (GRS) for disease prediction, disentangle the complex interactions underlying disease, and predict response to treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24743898 PMCID: PMC4050311 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-014-0488-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3782 Impact factor: 2.931
Fig. 1Network-based analysis of omic data to model the processes connecting genetic variation to disease
Molecular networks relevant to coronary artery disease
| Name | Source | Main associations | Biological interpretation | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macrophage-enriched metabolic network (MEMN) | B × H mouse cross, multiple tissues | Obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, total cholesterol levels, and HDL levels | Network represents an inflammatory response driven by genetic variation and affecting disease phenotypes, in liver and/or adipose tissue. | [ |
| Lipid-leukocyte (LL) module | Human population-based cohort, whole blood | Various metabolites (HDL, VLDL, glycoproteins, isoleucine, and others) and immune response markers (IL-1ra, CRP, and heavy molecular weight adiponectin) | Module implicates acute inflammatory cells (mast cells and basophils) as reactive to various metabolites. Inverse relationship between module expression and its density. | [ |
| Combined inflammatory pathway | Human cohort enriched for low familial HDL-C, adipose tissue | VCAM1 levels and SNPs predictive of low HDL-C | Pathway represents an inflammatory link between genetic variation and HDL-C levels and indicates that HDL levels may be regulated by inflammatory processes. | [ |
| Two differential modules (case and control) | Human CAD case/control study, whole blood | Control module enriched for SNPs predictive of CAD. | Differential pathways represent 2 modes of regulation acting in CAD vs non-CAD individuals, and indicate that B-cell immune pathways may be causally driving lipids levels and risk of CAD. | [ |
CRP C-reactive protein, HDL high density lipoprotein, HMWA high molecular weight adiponectin, IgE immunoglobulin E, IL-1ra interleukin 1 receptor antagonist, VCAM1 vascular cell adhesion molecule 1, VLDL very low density lipoprotein