Brief Reviews |
From the Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications (T.A.M., C.J.O.), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md; the Human Genetics Center (E.B.), University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Tex; the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Framingham Heart Study (C.J.O.), Framingham, Mass; and the Inherited Disease Research Branch (A.F.W.), National Human Genome Research Institute, Baltimore, Md.
Correspondence to Dr Teri A. Manolio, Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 6701 Rockledge Drive, MSC 7934, Bethesda, MD 20892-7934. E-mail manolio{at}nih.gov
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Only 1 genetic variant, MMP 3, has shown consistently positive associations with ultrasonographic carotid disease, although it has not been studied widely. Another, PON1 L55 mol/L, is weakly associated in subgroups only. Genetic variants reported to be associated with clinical cardiovascular disease show weak or no relationship to carotid atherosclerosis.
Key Words: atherosclerosis genes human carotid artery cardiovascular disease
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Intimal-medial thickening (IMT) of the carotid artery determined by B-mode ultrasonography is a quantitative measure of atherosclerosis that has a graded, predictive relationship to overt clinical disease.3 Carotid IMT can be measured noninvasively in population-based samples free of many of the biases of clinically identified cases and controls.35 Focal carotid wall thickening (plaque) and lumen narrowing (stenosis) can also be imaged and also predict cardiovascular events.6
Ultrasonographic measures of the carotid artery may thus provide a useful intermediate phenotype for the identification of atherosclerosis-related genes. In this review, we describe the most commonly reported ultrasound-defined carotid phenotypes and estimates of their heritability, genetic variants examined for linkage or association with these phenotypes in human studies, and the strength of the evidence for or against a causative role of the variants.
| Carotid Phenotypes and Their Heritability |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Variability of carotid IMT has been suggested to be higher for the near wall (that is, nearest the skin and the ultrasound transducer) than the far wall, because of physical characteristics of transmission and reflection of the ultrasound beam.9,10 Risk factor associations are at least as strong in the near wall as the far wall, however, and atherosclerosis progression rates are similar, with the most precise measure probably being combined near and far wall thickness.11
Reported differences in relationships of risk factors and disease incidence with IMT measured at different carotid sites have raised the possibility of site-specific differences in their cause and, possibly, their genetic determinants.12 Development and progression of atherosclerotic lesions of the internal carotid, where flow is turbulent, have been suggested to be related primarily to lipid accumulation and plaque hemorrhage, whereas the laminar flow typical of the common carotid may lead to more diffuse medial thickening indistinguishable ultrasonographically from atherosclerosis.3,12,13 This may explain why internal carotid IMT has been more strongly related to increased risk of incident disease, particularly incident coronary heart disease (CHD), than has IMT in the common carotid.3
One of the earliest reports of the potential familial nature of carotid artery structure demonstrated parental history of myocardial infarction to be associated with higher pressure-strain elastic modulus (Ep, a measure of stiffness) in 10- to 17-year-old adolescents.14 Although Ep is infrequently assessed, subsequent studies confirmed associations of carotid IMT with an estimated CHD family risk score,15 early-onset parental CHD death,16 and early-onset parental CHD incidence.1719 Adjustment for measured CHD risk factors had little impact on any of these associations. Similar to the site-specific differences in subsequent clinical cardiovascular disease reported, internal carotid IMT has been more strongly related to early parental history of stroke, whereas common carotid IMT may be more strongly related to early parental history of myocardial infarction.20
The metric commonly used to summarize the familial and genetic nature of a trait is heritability (H, h2, or
2G/
2P). The heritability of a trait is the proportion of interindividual variation in the trait (
2P) attributable to genetic variation (
2G). Heritability of a trait is a population- and environment-specific parameter, and its value, high or low, does not indicate the role of genes in any specific individual or patient. Heritability does, however, allow one to predict the expected degree of familial aggregation of a trait, and traits with a high heritability should prove fruitful in identifying trait-related genes.
One of the first formal assessments of heritability of carotid atherosclerosis was reported for carotid IMT in 46 sibships in Mexico City.21 The estimate of heritability was high, 92%, for the common carotid, and 82% for the internal carotid, after adjustment for standard CHD risk factors (Table 1). These high estimates have been questioned and subsequent reports have consistently estimated heritabilities in the range of 20% to 40% in unselected subjects,22,23 twins,24,25 and subjects with type II diabetes,26 although they are somewhat higher in families ascertained through a hypertensive parent27 and in randomly ascertained families.12
|
Carotid Plaque and Stenosis
Carotid plaque is focal thickening of the carotid wall caused by atherosclerosis (Figure 2). Like definitions of IMT, plaque definitions vary and include focal thickening >50% of the surrounding wall;22,28 focal widening with protrusion into the lumen;29 localized IMT more than or equal to the cutpoints in the range of 0.75 mm to 1.5 mm;24,3035 and focal acceleration of flow as measured by Doppler spectral analysis.7,36 Reference may also be made to "carotid atherosclerosis," also typically defined as thickening greater than a given threshold, whether focal or not.37,38 A plaque score or "B" score developed for the Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Plaque Study39 based on increasing categories of IMT has also been used,4042 whereas other studies have calculated plaque scores by summing the maximal thickness of each plaque in the carotid arteries bilaterally.43
|
Plaque as a carotid atherosclerosis phenotype is not studied as frequently as carotid IMT. The heritability of plaque determined by localized IMT
1.5 mm was recently estimated at 23% to 28%.35 Carotid plaque has also been reported to be more strongly related to early parental CHD death than is IMT.44 Whereas one would anticipate that genes influencing plaque overlap with those influencing IMT, there are likely to be unique sets of genes related to both.45
Other Carotid Phenotypes
Other phenotypes related to carotid atherosclerosis include plaque echogenicity (consistent pathologically with more organized and fibrotic plaques) or echolucency (consistent with greater lipid deposition, intraplaque hemorrhage, and vulnerability to rupture),46 lumen diameter, distensibility, and stiffness. Lumen diameter is not widely reported because it correlates relatively poorly with atherosclerosis in its early stages, probably because the vessel dilates to preserve the lumen from encroachment until fairly late in the disease.10 Distensibility and stiffness are related to the elasticity measures described14 and are often calculated as the difference between minimum and maximum luminal diameter during the cardiac cycle multiplied by some index of blood pressure.47 Few reports of heritability of these measures are available, although one study did demonstrate higher heritability of lumen diameter (0.44) than IMT (0.21) and similar heritability of arterial stiffness (0.23).22
| Genetic Variants Related to Carotid Phenotypes |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Angiotensin 1-Converting Enzyme
Perhaps the most studied locus in relation to carotid atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular disease in general, is the insertion/deletion polymorphism of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) gene.48 Presence (insertion, I) or absence (deletion, D) of a 287-bp alu-repeat sequence in reverse orientation in intron 16 of this gene is associated with substantially different levels of plasma ACE activity in a codominant fashion, with DD homozygotes having the highest levels.48 ACE converts inactive angiotensin I to the vasoconstrictor angiotensin II and also inactivates the vasodilator bradykinin, leading to increased vascular tone, vascular smooth muscle cell growth, neointimal proliferation, and extracellular matrix deposition.34,49 Variants associated with higher ACE activity might thus be expected to be related to increased carotid wall thickness and plaque formation.
Evidence for such an association is inconsistent, however, with the majority of studies showing no association23,31,33,46,4962 whereas several show higher IMT and plaque frequency in DD homozygotes or D allele carriers34,36,6373 (Table I, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). In only one was higher IMT associated with the II genotype, but this was in a small number of patients with symptomatic carotid territory cerebral ischemia.64 Most studies of the ACE genotype and carotid atherosclerosis, regardless of findings, include <500 subjects, with the 2 largest (
100054 and 400031 subjects) showing no association. Only 2 studies reported possible interactions of the D allele with other factors in relation to IMT, in that IMT increased more steeply with increasing systolic blood pressure61 and age58 in D allele carriers than in II homozygotes.61 Another showed an association of the DD genotype with echolucent (high-risk) plaques despite lack of association with IMT or stenosis.46
Apolipoprotein E
Another widely studied gene in relation to carotid atherosclerosis is apolipoprotein E (APOE), whose role in cardiovascular disease has been reviewed by Eichner et al.74 Three common alleles (designated
2,
3, and
4) produce 3 protein isoforms differing at amino acid positions 112 and 158. The most common allele, APOE*
3, produces the Apo E3 isoform with cysteine at position 112 and arginine at 158, whereas the least common, APOE*
2, produces the Apo E2 protein with cysteine at both positions, and Apo E4 has arginine at both positions. Apolipoprotein levels vary by polymorphism, with APOE*
2 associated with higher and APOE*
4 associated with lower plasma apo E levels.75 Apo E2 in turn is associated with lower low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels, and Apo E4 with higher levels, than is the Apo E3 isoform.76 Carrying an APOE*
4 allele has generally been associated with modestly increased risk of coronary heart disease (and strongly increased risk of Alzheimer disease), and carrying an APOE*
2 allele has been associated with lower risk of coronary disease, compared with the
3/
3 genotype,75 although the APOE*
2 allele has also been related to increased risk of coronary disease.74,77
Most studies of the APOE
2/
3/
4 polymorphism have shown carotid IMT to be lower in carriers of the
2 allele and higher in carriers of the
4 allele, compared with
3/
3 homozygotes76,7884 (Table II, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). These associations have not been totally consistent, however, with de Andrade38 and Hanon85 showing higher IMT in
2 carriers, Zannad23 showing higher IMT in
3/
3 homozygotes compared with
2 or
4 carriers but on the right side only, and several studies30,37,49,58,62,68,8689showing no association. Both studies reporting higher IMT in
2 carriers excluded persons with prevalent cardiovascular disease, which excludes proportionately more persons with carotid thickening,38 although relationships of APOE and IMT have been suggested to be similar regardless of prevalent disease.78 Most positive findings have remained after adjustment for multiple cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors and particularly for lipoprotein levels, through which the apo E polymorphism might be expected to exert some of its effect.75 Associations in diabetics68,80 and dialysis patients30,79 have tended to be less consistent than those in unselected populations. Interactions with environmental or context-dependent factors have been infrequently examined, although 2 studies suggested an interaction of the
4 allele with smoking to produce increased carotid atherosclerosis,37,88 and 1 formally tested and demonstrated a greater increase in IMT with increasing body mass index in
4 carriers.58 Another demonstrated a greater increase in plaque frequency per "unit change" in genotype in women than in men.84
Angiotensinogen and Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor
Polymorphisms in the genes for angiotensinogen (AGT) and angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AGTR1) have been associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk.90,91 AGT is the precursor peptide of angiotensin II, a potent vasoconstrictor involved in regulation of blood pressure and fluid and electrolyte balance.92 AGT is cleaved by renin and ACE (discussed previously) to form angiotensin II, which then interacts with the AGTR1 to initiate a signal transduction cascade resulting in vasoconstriction.92 Angiotensin II stimulates proliferation and migration of vascular smooth muscle cells, causing intimal thickening; it also upregulates monocyte chemoattractant factor-1 to attract monocytes to the vessel wall and increases oxidation and uptake of LDL by macrophages, thus promoting foam cell formation.9395
The most widely studied AGT polymorphism, a methionine to threonine substitution at position 235 in exon 2 of the gene, appears to be nonfunctional, but is in strong linkage disequilibrium with a guanine for adenine substitution 6 nucleotides upstream of the transcription initiation site (G-6A), which leads to increased gene transcription.96 It is also in strong linkage disequilibrium with a threonine to methionine substitution at position 174 (T174M), also in exon 2. Both the T allele of the M235T variant and M allele of the T174M variant have been associated with increased angiotensinogen levels, hypertension, and/or coronary disease.96,97 A second polymorphism in the promoter region, an adenine for cytosine substitution (A-20C), is also in nearly complete linkage disequilibrium with the G-6A polymorphism and has been related to increased plasma AGT levels and risk of hypertension. Lastly, an A-to-C transversion in the AGTR1 at nucleotide 1166 (AGTR1 A1166C) in the 3' untranslated region has been associated with increased risk of essential hypertension and higher prevalence of coronary disease.92
Studies of the AGT M235T polymorphism have fairly consistently shown no association with IMT in a variety of population samples,50,56,58,73,97100 although 1 study of 98 previously untreated hypertensive patients showed higher IMT at entry and greater reduction in IMT after treatment in TT homozygotes101 (Table III, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). Losito et al73 also examined the T174M polymorphism, with no association demonstrated. Similarly, no associations were detected with the AGTR1 A1166C polymorphism.52,56,58,73,92,100,102 Only one study to date has examined the promoter region polymorphisms, with no overall association detected, but women carrying the AGT-6A and AGT-20C alleles were shown to have higher IMT after adjustment.92 Only 1 possible geneenvironment interaction was reported, for the AGT M235T polymorphism, with TT homozygotes shown to have a steeper increase in IMT with increasing systolic blood pressure compared with M allele carriers.58 Two studies examined possible genegene interactions, with one suggesting that the ACE I allele is associated with increased IMT in AGT G-6A GG homozygotes only,92 and another showing carriers of the ACE D allele, AGT M235T T allele, and AGT1R A1166C C allele together to have the highest carotid IMT.56
Methylene Tetrahydrofolate Reductase
Genetic variation in the enzyme methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase has been associated with increased levels of homocysteine and increased risk of coronary disease. methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase reduces 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate to produce 5-methyltetrahydrofolate, which acts as a carbon donor in the conversion of homocysteine to methionine.103 C-to-T transition at position 677 produces an alanine to valine substitution, increasing the thermolability of the enzyme and reducing its activity.104 Homocysteine levels tend to be higher in persons homozygous for the thermolabile variant, particularly in the setting of dietary folate deficiency.105 Homocysteine may promote atherosclerosis and thrombosis by enhancing vascular cell proliferation and promoting prothrombotic activity in the vessel wall.103
Associations with carotid atherosclerosis have been inconsistent, with 8 studies showing no association,100,104,106111 7 showing higher IMT or more frequent stenosis in T allele carriers or TT homozygotes, although often only in subgroups,100,103,112116 and 1 showing less frequent atherosclerosis in TT homozygotes62 (Table IV, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). Although 1 study of hemodialysis patients showed a graded relationship of IMT to number of T alleles,113 others showed increased atherosclerosis only in those without cardiovascular disease,103 or in men only,100 or in women only.116 This last analysis also suggested an interaction with cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption in that TT homozygous women who smoked or consumed alcohol had higher IMTs than those who did not; this difference was not seen for the other genotypes.116
Paraoxonase
Three paraoxonase genes (PON 1, PON 2, PON 3) have been mapped to chromosome 7 and a number of polymorphisms have been identified.32 PON prevents lipid peroxidation of LDLs and PON 1 has been shown to hydrolyze lipid peroxides in human atherosclerotic lesions.32 Oxidative modification of LDL cholesterol renders it particularly atherogenic, making identification of factors protecting against oxidative modification potentially important in the prevention of atherosclerosis.117 Two frequent PON 1 polymorphisms at positions 192 (glutamine to arginine) and 55 (methionine to leucine) are in linkage disequilibrium and are associated with variations in PON activity to different substrates.117 Associations between PON 1 and PON 2 polymorphisms and a variety of CVD phenotypes, however, have been inconsistent,32 with some studies showing the 55L allele and/or the 192R allele to be associated with increased risk118 and others showing no association.32 Both cigarette smoking and diabetes are associated with increased lipid peroxidation, leading to examination of associations with CVD in subgroups defined by these traits, which have also been inconsistent.118
Of 13 studies considering the PON 1 192 polymorphism separately or jointly with PON 1 55 (Table V, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org), 10 showed no association with PON 1 192 considered alone,32,57,100,117123 although 1 of these showed IMT to be higher in subjects homozygous for the PON 1 55 L and PON 1 192Q alleles compared with LL/RR and MM/QQ subjects,122 and another showed the PON 1 192RR genotype to be more common than QQ in stenosis cases but only after adjustment for PON activity level.121 This report was subsequently refuted in an expanded sample from the same authors, who found no association regardless of adjustment for PON activity.123 An eleventh study showed higher IMT in RR homozygotes than Q allele carriers;124 the twelfth showed plaque to be more frequent in PON 1 192R carriers with high levels of high-density lipoprotein, but no difference in plaque by genotype in subjects with low levels of high-density lipoprotein.125 The thirteenth showed the R allele to be more frequent in older persons with moderate versus no atherosclerosis.62
Association studies of the PON 1 55 polymorphism have suggested that IMT and plaque are increased in L allele carriers, but relationships are complex. Of 5 studies examining the PON 1 55 allele, 1 showed plaque score to be higher in LL homozygotes,117 1 showed the L allele to be more frequent in stenosis cases but only after adjustment for PON activity level,121 another showed the aforementioned higher IMT in LL/QQ subjects,122 a fourth showed higher IMT in nonsmoking LL homozygotes but no association in smokers,126 and the fifth showed plaque to be more frequent in L allele carriers but only in nonsmokers, with a reversal of this relationship in smokers.32 Subsequent expansion of the sample showing increased L allele frequency in stenosis cases after adjustment for PON activity failed to confirm this association.123 Only 2 studies examined the PON 2 S311C polymorphism and found no relationship with carotid atherosclerosis.32,57 Examination of 2 additional promoter polymorphisms, as well as a haplotype comprising polymorphisms at 162/108/55/192, failed to detect any association with stenosis cases.123
Nitric Oxide Synthase
Nitric oxide is a potent vasodilator produced by the action of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) on L-arginine.127 NO also inhibits platelet aggregation and adhesion, leukocyte chemotaxis and adhesion, adhesion molecule and chemokine expression, smooth muscle cell proliferation and migration, and LDL oxidation.127,128 For these reasons, endothelial NO may have a prominent role in protection against atherosclerosis.
NOS exists in 3 forms: endothelial, neuronal, and inducible. Endothelial NOS (eNOS or NOS 3) is presumed responsible for most of the endothelial and vascular effects of NO. Several polymorphisms of the NOS 3 gene have been identified, one of which, a G-to-T transversion at nucleotide 894 of exon 7, produces a glutamic acid to aspartic acid substitution at amino acid 298.129 This induces a conformational change that may reduce NOS 3 activity.127 This variant has been associated with enhanced vasoconstrictive response to phenylephrine; with enhanced blood pressure response to endurance training; and with hypertension, coronary disease, and myocardial infarction.127,128 A second polymorphism in the 5' flanking region (T-786C) reduces NOS 3 gene promoter activity and has been associated with coronary spasm.130 Multiple intronic polymorphisms of unknown significance have also been identified.127
No association of the G894T variant with carotid atherosclerosis was found in 4 studies,89,128130,148 although a fifth demonstrated T homozygosity to be more frequent in subjects with plaque127 (Table VI, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). The T-786C polymorphism was more frequent in stenosis cases in the 1 study that examined it.130 The intronic polymorphisms have not been widely studied,127 although loss of heterozygosity for the intron 13 CA repeat has been detected in excised carotid plaques.131 One study of epistasis in hemodialysis patients reported increased plaque frequency in subjects with the T-786C polymorphism in combination with APOE*
4; the same interaction was found for a NOS 3 intron 4 polymorphism tightly linked to the T-786C locus.89
Genes Related to Lipid and Lipoprotein Levels
Multiple genes in pathways of production or metabolism of lipids and lipoproteins have been examined in relation to carotid atherosclerosis100,139,149165 (Table VII, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). IMT is consistently higher and plaque more frequent in familial hypercholesterolemia patients, but specific mutations have not consistently been implicated. Associations with other mutations have either been inconsistent, not yet replicated (that is, single reports), or not detected.
Other Polymorphisms
Genetic variants related to hemostatic and inflammatory factors, interleukins and immune response,41,137,139141,168171 platelet receptors,100,134,136139,166,167 and oxidative pathways,172174 have also been studied sporadically (Table VIII, available online at http://atvb.ahajournals.org). Associations with hemostasis-related variants have generally been absent132134 or present only in subgroups.28,100 The Marburg I variant of factor VII activating protease and factor V Leiden, however, have been shown to be more frequent in those with plaque progression,135 whereas the ß-fibrinogen C148T polymorphism in the homozygous TT form was associated with higher plaque score,135 although none of these associations was replicated in a large sample from the Framingham Heart Study.134
Of the other variants studied, the 6A allele of the MMP3 5A/6A promoter polymorphism has been associated with higher IMT and stenosis in all 4 studies examining it.136139 Four studies assessed the IL-6 G-174C polymorphisms but with inconsistent or negative results.137,139141 Two studies examined the Leu7Pro variant in pre-pro-neuropeptide Y and both showed higher IMT in 7Pro allele carriers.142,143 Scattered reports of other polymorphisms are difficult to interpret but are included for completeness.42,43,100,175180
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Several factors may account for the discordance among these studies, including: (1) sampling error or random type I errors in positive studies; (2) lack of power in negative studies; (3) genetic heterogeneity; (4) population stratification or confounding; (5) geneenvironment interactions modulating expression of an associated genotype; or (6) differences in measurement methods and reproducibility across studies.
Despite its high heritability, high measurement precision, and strong relation to subsequent CVD, all of which making ultrasonographic carotid atherosclerosis an attractive intermediate phenotype, genetic variants reported to be associated with clinical cardiovascular disease show weak or no relationship to carotid atherosclerosis. This may reflect inconsistency in associations with clinical cardiovascular disease itself, as many initial reports of candidate gene associations are not replicated in further investigation.144146 An alternative hypothesis suitable for investigation is that genetic determinants of ultrasound-defined carotid atherosclerosis differ from those of overt cardiovascular disease. Because of its association with multiple cardiovascular diseases, discovery of the gene(s) for carotid atherosclerosis should be pursued through large-scale genomic studies as distinct studies unto themselves. In addition, sequence variants may not adequately capture the totality of heritable variation in this or other traits; epigenetic and posttranslational protein modifications should also be investigated for relationships to carotid atherosclerosis.
Received April 27, 2004; accepted June 14, 2004.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|