4.7 Article

Genetic variation and urine cadmium levels: ABCC1 effects in the Strong Heart Family Study

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
卷 276, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116717

关键词

Cadmium; Heritability; Quantitative trait locus linkage; Association study; American Indians

资金

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [75N92019D00027, 75N92019D00028, 75N92019D00029, 75N92019D00030, R01HL090863, R01HL109315, R01HL109301, R01HL109284, R01HL109282, R01HL109319, U01HL41642, U01HL41652, U01HL41654, U01HL65520, U01HL65521]
  2. National Institutes of Health Sciences [R01ES021367, R01ES025216, P42ES010349, P30ES009089]
  3. la Caixa Foundation [100010434, LCF/BQ/IN18/11660001]
  4. Third AstraZeneca Award for Spanish Young Researchers

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study evaluated genetic determinants of urine cadmium levels in American Indian adults and found that urine cadmium concentrations are heritable and influenced by a genetic locus on chromosome 16, which is explained by genetic variation in the ABCC1 gene. Additional studies with extended sets of genome-wide markers are needed to confirm these findings and to identify additional metabolism and toxicity pathways for cadmium.
Genetic effects are suspected to influence cadmium internal dose. Our objective was to assess genetic determinants of urine cadmium in American Indian adults participating in the Strong Heart Family Study (SHFS). Urine cadmium levels and genotyped short tandem repeat (STR) markers were available on 1936 SHFS participants. We investigated heritability, including gene-by-sex and smoking interactions, and STR-based quantitative trait locus (QTL) linkage, using a variance-component decomposition approach, which incorporates the genetic information contained in the pedigrees. We also used available single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from Illumina's Metabochip and custom panel to assess whether promising QTLs associated regions could be attributed to SNPs annotated to specific genes. Median urine cadmium levels were 0.44 mu g/g creatinine. The heritability of urine cadmium concentrations was 28%, with no evidence of gene-by-sex or -smoking interaction. We found strong statistical evidence for a genetic locus at chromosome 16 determining urine cadmium concentrations (Logarithm of odds score [LOD] = 3.8). Among the top 20 associated SNPs in this locus, 17 were annotated to ABCC1 (p-values from 0.0002 to 0.02), and attenuated the maximum linkage peak by a similar to 40%. Suggestive QTL signals (LOD>1.9) in chromosomes 2, 6, 11, 14, and 19, showed associated SNPs in the genes NDUFA10, PDE10A, PLEKHA7, BAZIA and CHAFIA, respectively. Our findings support that urinary cadmium levels are heritable and influenced by a QTL on chromosome 16, which was explained by genetic variation in ABCC1. Studies with extended sets of genome-wide markers are needed to confirm these findings and to identify additional metabolism and toxicity pathways for cadmium. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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