| Literature DB >> 28360221 |
Carsten A Böger1, Mathias Gorski1, Gearoid M McMahon1, Huichun Xu1, Yen-Pei C Chang1, Peter J van der Most1, Gerjan Navis1, Ilja M Nolte1, Martin H de Borst1, Weihua Zhang1, Benjamin Lehne1, Marie Loh1, Sian-Tsung Tan1, Eric Boerwinkle1, Morgan E Grams1, Peggy Sekula1, Man Li2, Beth Wilmot1, James G Moon1, Paul Scheet1, Francesco Cucca1, Xiangjun Xiao1, Leo-Pekka Lyytikäinen1, Graciela Delgado1, Tanja B Grammer1, Marcus E Kleber1, Sanaz Sedaghat1, Fernando Rivadeneira1, Tanguy Corre2, Zoltan Kutalik1, Sven Bergmann1, Carrie M Nielson1, Priya Srikanth1, Alexander Teumer1, Martina Müller-Nurasyid1, Anne Catharina Brockhaus1, Arne Pfeufer1, Wolfgang Rathmann1, Annette Peters1, Martha Matsumoto1, Mariza de Andrade1, Elizabeth J Atkinson1, Cassianne Robinson-Cohen1, Ian H de Boer1, Shih-Jen Hwang1, Iris M Heid1, Martin Gögele1, Maria Pina Concas1, Toshiko Tanaka1, Stefania Bandinelli1, Mike A Nalls1, Andrew Singleton1, Salman M Tajuddin1, Adebowale Adeyemo1, Jie Zhou1, Ayo Doumatey1, Shannon McWeeney1, Joanne Murabito1, Nora Franceschini1, Michael Flessner1, Michael Shlipak1, James G Wilson1, Guanjie Chen1, Charles N Rotimi1, Alan B Zonderman1, Michele K Evans1, Luigi Ferrucci1, Olivier Devuyst1, Mario Pirastu1, Alan Shuldiner1, Andrew A Hicks1, Peter Paul Pramstaller1, Bryan Kestenbaum1, Sharon L R Kardia1, Stephen T Turner1, LifeLines Cohort Study1, Tamara Ellefson Briske1, Christian Gieger1, Konstantin Strauch1, Christa Meisinger1, Thomas Meitinger1, Uwe Völker1, Matthias Nauck1, Henry Völzke1, Peter Vollenweider1, Murielle Bochud1, Gerard Waeber1, Mika Kähönen1, Terho Lehtimäki1, Winfried März1, Abbas Dehghan1, Oscar H Franco1, Andre G Uitterlinden1, Albert Hofman1, Herman A Taylor1, John C Chambers1, Jaspal S Kooner1, Caroline S Fox1, Robert Hitzemann1, Eric S Orwoll1, Cristian Pattaro1, David Schlessinger1, Anna Köttgen1, Harold Snieder1, Afshin Parsa1, David M Cohen1.
Abstract
Disorders of water balance, an excess or deficit of total body water relative to body electrolyte content, are common and ascertained by plasma hypo- or hypernatremia, respectively. We performed a two-stage genome-wide association study meta-analysis on plasma sodium concentration in 45,889 individuals of European descent (stage 1 discovery) and 17,637 additional individuals of European descent (stage 2 replication), and a transethnic meta-analysis of replicated single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 79,506 individuals (63,526 individuals of European descent, 8765 individuals of Asian Indian descent, and 7215 individuals of African descent). In stage 1, we identified eight loci associated with plasma sodium concentration at P<5.0 × 10-6 Of these, rs9980 at NFAT5 replicated in stage 2 meta-analysis (P=3.1 × 10-5), with combined stages 1 and 2 genome-wide significance of P=5.6 × 10-10 Transethnic meta-analysis further supported the association at rs9980 (P=5.9 × 10-12). Additionally, rs16846053 at SLC4A10 showed nominally, but not genome-wide, significant association in combined stages 1 and 2 meta-analysis (P=6.7 × 10-8). NFAT5 encodes a ubiquitously expressed transcription factor that coordinates the intracellular response to hypertonic stress but was not previously implicated in the regulation of systemic water balance. SLC4A10 encodes a sodium bicarbonate transporter with a brain-restricted expression pattern, and variant rs16846053 affects a putative intronic NFAT5 DNA binding motif. The lead variants for NFAT5 and SLC4A10 are cis expression quantitative trait loci in tissues of the central nervous system and relevant to transcriptional regulation. Thus, genetic variation in NFAT5 and SLC4A10 expression and function in the central nervous system may affect the regulation of systemic water balance.Entities:
Keywords: human genetics; hypernatremia; hyponatremia; water-electrolyte balance
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28360221 PMCID: PMC5533231 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2016080892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol ISSN: 1046-6673 Impact factor: 10.121