| Literature DB >> 27342958 |
Barry I Freedman1,2, Crystal A Gadegbeku3, R Nick Bryan4, Nicholas M Pajewski5, Jasmin Divers5, Nicholette D Palmer2,6, Pamela J Hicks6, Lijun Ma1, Michael V Rocco1, S Carrie Smith6, Jianzhao Xu6, Christopher T Whitlow7, Benjamin C Wagner7, Carl D Langefeld5, Amret T Hawfield1, Jeffrey T Bates8, Alan J Lerner9, Dominic S Raj10, Mohammad S Sadaghiani3, Robert D Toto11, Jackson T Wright12, Donald W Bowden2,4, Jeff D Williamson13, Kaycee M Sink13, Joseph A Maldjian7,14.
Abstract
To assess apolipoprotein L1 gene (APOL1) renal-risk-variant effects on the brain, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based cerebral volumes and cognitive function were assessed in 517 African American-Diabetes Heart Study (AA-DHS) Memory IN Diabetes (MIND) and 2568 hypertensive African American Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) participants without diabetes. Within these cohorts, 483 and 197 had cerebral MRI, respectively. AA-DHS participants were characterized as follows: 60.9% female, mean age of 58.6 years, diabetes duration 13.1 years, estimated glomerular filtration rate of 88.2 ml/min/1.73 m(2), and a median spot urine albumin to creatinine ratio of 10.0 mg/g. In additive genetic models adjusting for age, sex, ancestry, scanner, intracranial volume, body mass index, hemoglobin A1c, statins, nephropathy, smoking, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease, APOL1 renal-risk-variants were positively associated with gray matter volume (β = 3.4 × 10(-3)) and negatively associated with white matter lesion volume (β = -0.303) (an indicator of cerebral small vessel disease) and cerebrospinal fluid volume (β= -30707) (all significant), but not with white matter volume or cognitive function. Significant associations corresponding to adjusted effect sizes (β/SE) were observed with gray matter volume (0.16) and white matter lesion volume (-0.208), but not with cerebrospinal fluid volume (-0.251). Meta-analysis results with SPRINT Memory and Cognition in Decreased Hypertension (MIND) participants who had cerebral MRI were confirmatory. Thus, APOL1 renal-risk-variants are associated with larger gray matter volume and lower white matter lesion volume suggesting lower intracranial small vessel disease.Entities:
Keywords: APOL1; African Americans; brain; cognition; hypertension; magnetic resonance imaging; type 2 diabetes mellitus
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27342958 PMCID: PMC4946987 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2016.04.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612