Soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor: genetic variation and cardiovascular disease risk in black adults

NC Olson, LM Raffield, AH Moxley… - Circulation: Genomic …, 2021 - Am Heart Assoc
NC Olson, LM Raffield, AH Moxley, TW Miller-Fleming, PL Auer, N Franceschini, D Ngo…
Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine, 2021Am Heart Assoc
Background: suPAR (Soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor) has emerged as an
important biomarker of coagulation, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.
The contribution of suPAR to CVD risk and its genetic influence in Black populations have
not been evaluated. Methods: We measured suPAR in 3492 Black adults from the
prospective, community-based JHS (Jackson Heart Study). Cross-sectional associations of
suPAR with lifestyle and CVD risk factors were assessed, whole-genome sequence data …
Background
suPAR (Soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor) has emerged as an important biomarker of coagulation, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. The contribution of suPAR to CVD risk and its genetic influence in Black populations have not been evaluated.
Methods
We measured suPAR in 3492 Black adults from the prospective, community-based JHS (Jackson Heart Study). Cross-sectional associations of suPAR with lifestyle and CVD risk factors were assessed, whole-genome sequence data were used to evaluate genetic associations of suPAR, and relationships of suPAR with incident CVD outcomes and overall mortality were estimated over follow-up.
Results
In Cox models adjusted for traditional CVD risk factors, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and CRP (C-reactive protein), each 1-SD higher suPAR was associated with a 21% to 31% increased risk of incident coronary heart disease, heart failure, stroke, and mortality. In the genome-wide association study, 2 missense (rs399145 encoding p.Thr86Ala, rs4760 encoding p.Phe272Leu) and 2 noncoding regulatory variants (rs73935023 within an enhancer element and rs4251805 within the promoter) of PLAUR on chromosome 19 were each independently associated with suPAR and together explained 14% of suPAR phenotypic variation. The allele frequencies of each of the four suPAR-associated genetic variants differ considerably across African and European populations. We further show that PLAUR rs73935023 can alter transcriptional activity in vitro. We did not find any association between genetically determined suPAR and CVD in JHS or a larger electronic medical record-based analyses of Blacks or Whites.
Conclusions
Our results demonstrate the importance of ancestry-differentiated genetic variation on suPAR levels and indicate suPAR is a CVD biomarker in Black adults.
Am Heart Assoc