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Genome-wide Association Study Meta-analysis of Blood Pressure Traits and Hypertension in Sub-Saharan African Populations: An AWI-Gen Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * The AWI-Gen study analyzed blood pressure traits in over 10,000 individuals from sub-Saharan Africa and identified two significant genetic signals linked to systolic and pulse pressure.
  • * Results indicate that existing polygenic risk scores from different ancestries are not very predictive for African populations, highlighting the need for diverse models for better accuracy.

Article Abstract

Most hypertension-related genome-wide association studies (GWAS) focus on non-African populations, despite hypertension (a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease) being highly prevalent in Africa. The AWI-Gen study GWAS meta-analysis for blood pressure-related traits (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, pulse pressure, mean-arterial pressure and hypertension) from three sub-Saharan African geographic regions (N=10,775), identified two genome-wide significant signals (p<5E-08): systolic blood pressure near P2RY1 (rs77846204; intergenic variant, p=4.25E-08) and pulse pressure near Linc01256 (rs80141533; intergenic variant, p=4.25E-08). No genome-wide signals were detected for the AWI-Gen GWAS meta-analysis with previous African-ancestry GWASs (UK Biobank (African), Uganda Genome Resource). Suggestive signals (p<5E-06) were observed for all traits, with 29 displaying pleiotropic effects and several replicating known associations. Polygenic risk scores developed from studies on different ancestries had limited transferability, with multi-ancestry models providing better prediction. This study provides insights into the genetics and physiology of blood pressure variation in African populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9949264PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2532794/v1DOI Listing

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