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(Stroke. 2005;36:2278.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Research Reports |
From the Cardiovascular Research Institute (L.P., C.H., P.Y.K.), Departments of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care and Center for Cerebrovascular Research (M.N.T., A.A., W.L.Y.), Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics (C.E.M.), Neurological Surgery (M.T.L., W.L.Y.), Neurology (W.L.Y.), and Medicine (E.B., S.C., R.C., J.Z.), University of California, San Francisco; and the Department of Genetics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (D.A.M.).
Correspondence to William L. Young, MD, UCSF, 1001 Potrero Ave, Room 3C-38, San Francisco, CA 94110. E-mail ccr{at}anesthesia.ucsf.edu
| Abstract |
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Methods A total of 177 sporadic BAVM patients and 129 controls (all subjects white) were genotyped for 2 variants in ALK1 and 7 variants in ENG.
Results The ALK1 IVS3-35A>G polymorphism was associated with BAVM: (AnyA [AA+AG] genotype: odds ratio, 2.47; 95% CI, 1.38 to 4.44; P=0.002). Two ENG polymorphisms, ENG 1742A>G and ENG 207G>A, showed a trend toward association with BAVM that did not reach statistical significance.
Conclusions A common polymorphism in ALK1 is associated with sporadic BAVM, suggesting that genetic variation in genes mutated in familial BAVM syndromes may play a role in sporadic BAVMs.
Key Words: case-control studies genetics vascular malformations
| Introduction |
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| Materials and Methods |
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Genotyping
Polymorphisms in ALK1 and ENG selected a priori by database searches (dbSNP) and via sequencing in 32 HHT patients (Table 1) were genotyped by template-directed dye-terminator incorporation assay with fluorescence-polarization detection.3,5
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Statistical Analysis
Variants polymorphic in the study cohort were tested for association with BAVM by univariable logistic regression. The criterion for statistical significance was P=0.05/6=0.0083 after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. Variant genotypes were coded dichotomously for the model that best fit the data. The primary collapse was major allele homozygotes versus other genotypes (recessive). A dominant model was the best fit for ALK1 IVS3-35A>G. We tested appropriateness of the model by adding back the heterozygous term. Multivariable logistic regression controlling for age and sex was also performed. Possible joint effects of ALK1 IVS3-35A>G and ENG 207G>A were examined by using a composite variable in univariable analysis and running a multivariable analysis with both SNPs entered as predictors in the model; both approaches yielded similar results. Haplotype prediction, haplotype association analysis, and linkage disequilibrium (LD) analyses were performed using Haploview.
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| Discussion |
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Familial inheritance of AVMs outside HHT is rare.6 We excluded cases with HHT diagnosis or family history from our analyses to focus on sporadic disease. Although undiagnosed or future BAVM cannot be ruled out in our healthy control population, at an estimated prevalence of 10 per 100 000,7 it is unlikely to significantly confound our results.
Presence of the ALK1 IVS3-35A allele is associated with a 2.5-fold increase in likelihood of BAVM in whites. This association is strengthened in patients who are also homozygous for the ENG 207G allele, which, on its own, exhibits a trend with BAVM. It remains to be shown whether the association is attributable to the polymorphisms studied here or to other variants in LD with them. For the following SNPs, a plausible argument can be made that they are functional: the silent exonic ENG 207G>A variant reduces the predicted binding score for a splicing protein;8 the ENG 1742A>G promoter polymorphism alters a predicted CCAAT-binding protein site, potentially modulating transcription.
The BAVM-associated ALK1 genotypes are carried by the majority of subjects in the population. Interaction between multiple genetic and environmental factors likely underlies sporadic BAVM. Although confounding attributable to population substratification in our cohort cannot be ruled out, the large magnitude of the combined effect suggests clinical significance. A larger cohort will be necessary to test whether the findings in whites extend to other race/ethnic subgroups.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received December 13, 2004; revision received April 20, 2005; accepted May 30, 2005.
| References |
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2. Matsubara S, Mandzia JL, ter Brugge K, Willinsky RA, Faughnan ME, Manzia JL. Angiographic and clinical characteristics of patients with cerebral arteriovenous malformations associated with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2000; 21: 10161020.
3. Pawlikowska L, Tran MN, Achrol AS, McCulloch CE, Ha C, Lind DL, Hashimoto T, Zaroff J, Lawton MT, Marchuk DA, Kwok PY, Young WL. Polymorphisms in genes involved in inflammatory and angiogenic pathways and the risk of hemorrhagic presentation of brain arteriovenous malformations. Stroke. 2004; 35: 22942300.
4. Halim AX, Singh V, Johnston SC, Higashida RT, Dowd CF, Halbach VV, Lawton MT, Gress DR, McCulloch CE, Young WL. Characteristics of brain arteriovenous malformations with coexisting aneurysms: a comparison of two referral centers. Stroke. 2002; 33: 675679.
5. Hsu TM, Kwok PY. Homogeneous primer extension assay with fluorescence polarization detection. Methods Mol Biol. 2003; 212: 177187.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
6. Kamiryo T, Nelson PK, Bose A, Zalzal P, Jafar JJ. Familial arteriovenous malformations in siblings. Surg Neurol. 2000; 53: 255259.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
7. Berman MF, Sciacca RR, Pile-Spellman J, Stapf C, Connolly ES Jr, Mohr JP, Young WL. The epidemiology of brain arteriovenous malformations. Neurosurgery. 2000; 47: 389396.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
8. Cartegni L, Wang J, Zhu Z, Zhang MQ, Krainer AR. ESEfinder: a web resource to identify exonic splicing enhancers. Nucleic Acids Res. 2003; 31: 35683571.
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