Hum Genet. 2019 Jul;138(7):739-748. doi: 10.1007/s00439-019-02024-6. Epub 2019 Jun 1.
Estimation of metabolic syndrome heritability in three large populations including full pedigree and genomic information.
Graziano F1,2, Biino G3, Bonati MT4, Neale BM5,6, Do R7,8, Concas MP9, Vaccargiu S10, Pirastu M10, Terradura-Vagnarelli O11, Cirillo M12, Laurenzi M11, Mancini M13, Zanchetti A4,14, Grassi M15.
Abstract
Metabolic syndrome is a complex human disorder characterized by a cluster of conditions (increased blood pressure, hyperglycemia, excessive body fat around the waist, and abnormal cholesterol or triglyceride levels). Any of these conditions increases the risk of serious disorders such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease. Currently, the degree of genetic regulation of this syndrome is under debate and partially unknown. The principal aim of this study was to estimate the genetic component and the common environmental effects in different populations using full pedigree and genomic information. We used three large populations (Gubbio, ARIC, and Ogliastra cohorts) to estimate the heritability of metabolic syndrome. Due to both pedigree and genotyped data, different approaches were applied to summarize relatedness conditions. Linear mixed models (LLM) using average information restricted maximum likelihood (AIREML) algorithm were applied to partition the variances and estimate heritability (h2) and common sib-household effect (c2). Globally, results obtained from pedigree information showed a significant heritability (h2: 0.286 and 0.271 in Gubbio and Ogliastra, respectively), whereas a lower, but still significant heritability was found using SNPs data ([Formula: see text]: 0.167 and 0.254 in ARIC and Ogliastra). The remaining heritability between h2and [Formula: see text] ranged between 0.031 and 0.237. Finally, the common environmental c2 in Gubbio and Ogliastra were also significant accounting for about 11% of the phenotypic variance. Availability of different kinds of populations and data helped us to better understand what happened when heritability of metabolic syndrome is estimated and account for different possible confounding. Furthermore, the opportunity of comparing different results provided more precise and less biased estimation of heritability.
- PMID:
- 31154530
- DOI:
- 10.1007/s00439-019-02024-6
- [Indexed for MEDLINE]
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