Genetic correlations between traits associated with hyperuricemia, gout, and comorbidities. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Hypertension, obesity, chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes are comorbidities that have very high prevalence among persons with hyperuricemia (serum urate > 6.8 mg/dL) and gout. Here we use multivariate genetic models to test the hypothesis that the co-association of traits representing hyperuricemia and its comorbidities is genetically based. Using Bayesian whole-genome regression models, we estimated the genetic marker-based variance and the covariance between serum urate, serum creatinine, systolic blood pressure (SBP), blood glucose and body mass index (BMI) from two independent family-based studies: The Framingham Heart Study-FHS and the Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network study-HyperGEN. The main genetic findings that replicated in both FHS and HyperGEN, were (1) creatinine was genetically correlated only with urate and (2) BMI was genetically correlated with urate, SBP, and glucose. The environmental covariance among the traits was generally highest for trait pairs involving BMI. The genetic overlap of traits representing the comorbidities of hyperuricemia and gout appears to cluster in two separate axes of genetic covariance. Because creatinine is genetically correlated with urate but not with metabolic traits, this suggests there is one genetic module of shared loci associated with hyperuricemia and chronic kidney disease. Another module of shared loci may account for the association of hyperuricemia and metabolic syndrome. This study provides a clear quantitative genetic basis for the clustering of comorbidities with hyperuricemia.

publication date

  • February 26, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Cardiometabolic Risk Factors
  • Gout
  • Hyperuricemia
  • Quantitative Trait Loci

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC8440599

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85101733568

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41431-021-00830-z

PubMed ID

  • 33637890

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 29

issue

  • 9