Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant)
The purpose of the proposed study, Genetics of Coronary and Aortic
Calcification (GENCAC), is to identify genetic factors that establish
susceptibility to (a) coronary and aortic atherosclerosis and (b) inter-individual
variability in the inflammatory response. We propose to quantify
coronary and aortic artery calcium volume in 441 selected, informative
pedigrees (~ 3,000 individuals) previously examined and extensively genotyped
(~400 markers spanning the genome) by the NHLBI Family Heart Study, in order
to identify genes associated with human atherosclerosis. An additional 275
African American sibships (~600 individuals, also examined and comparably
genotyped) will be included to address these study questions in this high-risk
population. Assessment of the inter-individual variability in the
inflammatory burden and the host response, and the extensive metabolic,
behavioral, and environmental data already collected on these pedigrees will
provide enhanced phenotypic homogeneity and increased analytic power in
assessing the genetic basis of atherosclerosis.
State of the art laboratory and statistical methods will be used to find,
localize and characterize the influence of predisposing genes to
atherosclerosis and the inflammatory response. Novel genetic analysis methods
will be used to address the issues of phenotypic, genetic and population
heterogeneity, epistasis, complex interactions among the genetic and
environmental risk factors, and to optimize the detection of genomic regions
affecting phenotypic susceptibility. The notorious issue of multiple
comparisons in genome scans will be bypassed with the use of novel global
testing procedures.
Based on a cost-efficient design of informative pedigrees and employing novel
methodology, this study will contribute currently unavailable information on
genetic and environmental determinants of atherosclerosis, with a focus on the
prevention of this widely prevalent condition associated with high burden of
costs to society.
No Sub Projects information available for 5U01HL067896-03
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