Vibha Bhatnagar, Lin Liu, Caroline M Nievergelt, Erin Richard, Victoria H Brophy, Braj Pandey, Michael S Lipkowitz, Daniel T O'Connor
American journal of hypertension 2012 NovBlood pressure is a complex quantitative trait with a strong genetic component. In this study, we leveraged the Veterans Affairs electronic medical record system to explore the relationship between Paraoxonase 1 (PON1)-108 C/T (rs705379) and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). Outpatient blood pressure data over an approximate 8-year period was collected from the Veterans Affairs Hypertensive Cohort (N = 1,302). Association between genotype and longitudinal MAP was further explored using a random effects model controlling for age, ancestry, renal function, and other determinants of blood pressure. To control for population stratification, principal component groupings based on ancestry informative markers in this dataset were included as covariates (in addition to self-identified ancestry). Data from the African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension (AASK, N = 857) was used to confirm significant findings in an independent cohort. There was a significant interaction between PON1-108 C/T genotype and follow-up age group. At a younger age (<50 years), there was an estimated 2.53 mm Hg (95% confidence interval: 1.06, 4.00) increase in MAP with each additional C-allele. At the older age groups, there were no significant associations between PON1-108 C/T genotype and MAP. Using data from the AASK trial, the C-allele at PON1-108 C/T was significantly associated with a higher MAP (P = 0.005) but only among younger participants (<54 years). The PON1-108 polymorphism may be associated with MAP in an age-dependent manner.
Vibha Bhatnagar, Lin Liu, Caroline M Nievergelt, Erin Richard, Victoria H Brophy, Braj Pandey, Michael S Lipkowitz, Daniel T O'Connor. Paraoxonase 1 (PON1) C/T-108 association with longitudinal mean arterial blood pressure. American journal of hypertension. 2012 Nov;25(11):1188-94
PMID: 22854640
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