Association between the variants and serum lipid levels, coronary heart disease and ischemic stroke risk and atorvastatin lipid-lowering efficacy.

Biosci Rep

Department of Cardiology, Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, The First Affiliated Hospital, Guangxi Medical University, Nanning 530021, Guangxi, China

Published: February 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the relationship between specific genetic variants (TIGIT and HAVCR1) and lipid metabolism, as well as the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) and ischemic stroke (IS) in a southern Chinese Han population.
  • Researchers analyzed genetic data from over a thousand individuals, including controls and patients with CHD and IS, to find significant differences in genotypes and their association with lipid levels and risks of these cardiovascular conditions.
  • The findings suggest that certain gene haplotypes affect lipid levels and interact with environmental factors like alcohol consumption and body mass index, indicating that these genetic variants could serve as potential risk factors for CHD and IS.

Article Abstract

Little is known about the association of the (T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 4 gene)- (hepatitis A virus cellular receptor 1) variants and lipid metabolism, the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) and ischemic stroke (IS). The present study aimed to determine the variants, their haplotypes and gene-environment interactions on serum lipid levels, the risk of CHD and IS, and the lipid-lowering efficacy of atorvastatin in a southern Chinese Han population. Genotypes of three variants in 622 controls, 579 CHD, and 546 IS patients were determined by the Snapshot technology. Atorvastatin calcium tablet (20 mg/day) was given in 724 hyperlipidemic patients for 8 weeks after genotyping. The rs12522248 genotypic and allelic frequencies were different between controls and patients, and were associated with the risk of CHD and IS. The rs1501908G-rs12522248T-rs2036402T haplotype was associated with an increased risk of CHD; the G-C-T haplotype was associated with lower risk of CHD; and the C-C-C haplotype was associated with an increased risk of IS. Variants and their haplotypes in controls were associated with triglyceride (rs1501908), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C, rs1501908, G-T-T), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C, rs12522248, C-C-C) and the ratio of total cholesterol (TC) to HDL-C (C-C-C). Interactions of rs1501908- and rs2036402-alcohol (HDL-C); rs1501908- and rs12522248-high body mass index (hBMI, ≥24 kg/m; TC); and variants-atorvastatin on several lipid parameters were detected. Interactions of rs12522248TC/CC-hBMI, G-T-T-, and C-C-C-smoking on the risk of CHD; and C-C-C-smoking, C-C-C-, and G-C-T-hBMI on the risk of IS were also observed. These findings suggest that the variants may be the genetic risk factors for CHD and IS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5773822PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BSR20171058DOI Listing

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