- Thibord, Florian;
- Song, Ci;
- Pattee, Jack;
- Rodriguez, Benjamin AT;
- Chen, Ming‐Huei;
- O’Donnell, Christopher J;
- Kleber, Marcus E;
- Delgado, Graciela E;
- Guo, Xiuqing;
- Yao, Jie;
- Taylor, Kent D;
- Ozel, Ayse Bilge;
- Brody, Jennifer A;
- McKnight, Barbara;
- Gyorgy, Beata;
- Simonsick, Eleanor;
- Leonard, Hampton L;
- Carrasquilla, Germán D;
- Guindo‐Martinez, Marta;
- Silveira, Angela;
- Temprano‐Sagrera, Gerard;
- Yanek, Lisa R;
- Becker, Diane M;
- Mathias, Rasika A;
- Becker, Lewis C;
- Raffield, Laura M;
- Kilpeläinen, Tuomas O;
- Grarup, Niels;
- Pedersen, Oluf;
- Hansen, Torben;
- Linneberg, Allan;
- Hamsten, Anders;
- Watkins, Hugh;
- Sabater‐Lleal, Maria;
- Nalls, Mike A;
- Trégouët, David‐Alexandre;
- Morange, Pierre‐Emmanuel;
- Psaty, Bruce M;
- Tracy, Russel P;
- Smith, Nicholas L;
- Desch, Karl C;
- Cushman, Mary;
- Rotter, Jerome I;
- de Vries, Paul S;
- Pankratz, Nathan D;
- Folsom, Aaron R;
- Morrison, Alanna C;
- März, Winfried;
- Tang, Weihong;
- Johnson, Andrew D
Background
Use of targeted exome-arrays with common, rare variants and functionally enriched variation has led to discovery of new genes contributing to population variation in risk factors. Plasminogen activator-inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), and the plasma product D-dimer are important components of the fibrinolytic system. There have been few large-scale genome-wide or exome-wide studies of PAI-1, tPA, and D-dimer.Objectives
We sought to discover new genetic loci contributing to variation in these traits using an exome-array approach.Methods
Cohort-level analyses and fixed effects meta-analyses of PAI-1 (n = 15 603), tPA (n = 6876,) and D-dimer (n = 19 306) from 12 cohorts of European ancestry with diverse study design were conducted, including single-variant analyses and gene-based burden testing.Results
Five variants located in NME7, FGL1, and the fibrinogen locus, all associated with D-dimer levels, achieved genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10-8 ). Replication was sought for these 5 variants, as well as 45 well-imputed variants with P < 1 × 10-4 in the discovery using an independent cohort. Replication was observed for three out of the five significant associations, including a novel and uncommon (0.013 allele frequency) coding variant p.Trp256Leu in FGL1 (fibrinogen-like-1) with increased plasma D-dimer levels. Additionally, a candidate-gene approach revealed a suggestive association for a coding variant (rs143202684-C) in SERPINB2, and suggestive associations with consistent effect in the replication analysis include an intronic variant (rs11057830-A) in SCARB1 associated with increased D-dimer levels.Conclusion
This work provides new evidence for a role of FGL1 in hemostasis.