Anna Köttgen
University of Freiburg
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Anna Köttgen.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Daniel Levy; Georg B. Ehret; Kenneth Rice; Germaine C. Verwoert; Lenore J. Launer; Abbas Dehghan; Nicole L. Glazer; Alanna C. Morrison; Andrew D. Johnson; Thor Aspelund; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Thomas Lumley; Anna Köttgen; Fernando Rivadeneira; Gudny Eiriksdottir; Xiuqing Guo; Dan E. Arking; Gary F. Mitchell; Francesco Mattace-Raso; Albert V. Smith; Kent D. Taylor; Robert B. Scharpf; Shih Jen Hwang; Eric J.G. Sijbrands; Joshua C. Bis; Tamara B. Harris; Santhi K. Ganesh; Christopher J. O'Donnell; Albert Hofman; Jerome I. Rotter
Blood pressure is a major cardiovascular disease risk factor. To date, few variants associated with interindividual blood pressure variation have been identified and replicated. Here we report results of a genome-wide association study of systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure and hypertension in the CHARGE Consortium (n = 29,136), identifying 13 SNPs for SBP, 20 for DBP and 10 for hypertension at P < 4 × 10−7. The top ten loci for SBP and DBP were incorporated into a risk score; mean BP and prevalence of hypertension increased in relation to the number of risk alleles carried. When ten CHARGE SNPs for each trait were included in a joint meta-analysis with the Global BPgen Consortium (n = 34,433), four CHARGE loci attained genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8) for SBP (ATP2B1, CYP17A1, PLEKHA7, SH2B3), six for DBP (ATP2B1, CACNB2, CSK-ULK3, SH2B3, TBX3-TBX5, ULK4) and one for hypertension (ATP2B1). Identifying genes associated with blood pressure advances our understanding of blood pressure regulation and highlights potential drug targets for the prevention or treatment of hypertension.
Nature | 2011
Karsten Suhre; So-Youn Shin; Ann-Kristin Petersen; Robert P. Mohney; David Meredith; Brigitte Wägele; Elisabeth Altmaier; Panos Deloukas; Jeanette Erdmann; Elin Grundberg; Christopher J. Hammond; Martin Hrabé de Angelis; Gabi Kastenmüller; Anna Köttgen; Florian Kronenberg; Massimo Mangino; Christa Meisinger; Thomas Meitinger; Hans-Werner Mewes; Michael V. Milburn; Cornelia Prehn; Johannes Raffler; Janina S. Ried; Werner Römisch-Margl; Nilesh J. Samani; Kerrin S. Small; H.-Erich Wichmann; Guangju Zhai; Thomas Illig; Tim D. Spector
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many risk loci for complex diseases, but effect sizes are typically small and information on the underlying biological processes is often lacking. Associations with metabolic traits as functional intermediates can overcome these problems and potentially inform individualized therapy. Here we report a comprehensive analysis of genotype-dependent metabolic phenotypes using a GWAS with non-targeted metabolomics. We identified 37 genetic loci associated with blood metabolite concentrations, of which 25 show effect sizes that are unusually high for GWAS and account for 10–60% differences in metabolite levels per allele copy. Our associations provide new functional insights for many disease-related associations that have been reported in previous studies, including those for cardiovascular and kidney disorders, type 2 diabetes, cancer, gout, venous thromboembolism and Crohn’s disease. The study advances our knowledge of the genetic basis of metabolic individuality in humans and generates many new hypotheses for biomedical and pharmaceutical research.
The Lancet | 2008
Abbas Dehghan; Anna Köttgen; Qiong Yang; Shih Jen Hwang; W.H. Linda Kao; Fernando Rivadeneira; Eric Boerwinkle; Daniel Levy; Albert Hofman; Brad C. Astor; Emelia J. Benjamin; Cornelia M. van Duijn; Jacqueline C. M. Witteman; Josef Coresh; Caroline S. Fox
BACKGROUND Hyperuricaemia, a highly heritable trait, is a key risk factor for gout. We aimed to identify novel genes associated with serum uric acid concentration and gout. METHODS Genome-wide association studies were done for serum uric acid in 7699 participants in the Framingham cohort and in 4148 participants in the Rotterdam cohort. Genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were replicated in white (n=11 024) and black (n=3843) individuals who took part in the study of Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC). The SNPs that reached genome-wide significant association with uric acid in either the Framingham cohort (p<5.0 x 10(-8)) or the Rotterdam cohort (p<1.0 x 10(-7)) were evaluated with gout. The results obtained in white participants were combined using meta-analysis. FINDINGS Three loci in the Framingham cohort and two in the Rotterdam cohort showed genome-wide association with uric acid. Top SNPs in each locus were: missense rs16890979 in SLC2A9 (p=7.0 x 10(-168) and 2.9 x 10(-18) for white and black participants, respectively); missense rs2231142 in ABCG2 (p=2.5 x 10(-60) and 9.8 x 10(-4)), and rs1165205 in SLC17A3 (p=3.3 x 10(-26) and 0.33). All SNPs were direction-consistent with gout in white participants: rs16890979 (OR 0.59 per T allele, 95% CI 0.52-0.68, p=7.0 x 10(-14)), rs2231142 (1.74, 1.51-1.99, p=3.3 x 10(-15)), and rs1165205 (0.85, 0.77-0.94, p=0.002). In black participants of the ARIC study, rs2231142 was direction-consistent with gout (1.71, 1.06-2.77, p=0.028). An additive genetic risk score of high-risk alleles at the three loci showed graded associations with uric acid (272-351 mumol/L in the Framingham cohort, 269-386 mumol/L in the Rotterdam cohort, and 303-426 mumol/L in white participants of the ARIC study) and gout (frequency 2-13% in the Framingham cohort, 2-8% in the Rotterdam cohort, and 1-18% in white participants in the ARIC study). INTERPRETATION We identified three genetic loci associated with uric acid concentration and gout. A score based on genes with a putative role in renal urate handling showed a substantial risk for gout.
The Lancet | 2013
Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Josef Coresh; Olivier Devuyst; Richard J. Johnson; Anna Köttgen; Andrew S. Levey; Adeera Levin
In the past decade, kidney disease diagnosed with objective measures of kidney damage and function has been recognised as a major public health burden. The population prevalence of chronic kidney disease exceeds 10%, and is more than 50% in high-risk subpopulations. Independent of age, sex, ethnic group, and comorbidity, strong, graded, and consistent associations exist between clinical prognosis and two hallmarks of chronic kidney disease: reduced glomerular filtration rate and increased urinary albumin excretion. Furthermore, an acute reduction in glomerular filtration rate is a risk factor for adverse clinical outcomes and the development and progression of chronic kidney disease. An increasing amount of evidence suggests that the kidneys are not only target organs of many diseases but also can strikingly aggravate or start systemic pathophysiological processes through their complex functions and effects on body homoeostasis. Risk of kidney disease has a notable genetic component, and identified genes have provided new insights into relevant abnormalities in renal structure and function and essential homoeostatic processes. Collaboration across general and specialised health-care professionals is needed to fully address the challenge of prevention of acute and chronic kidney disease and improve outcomes.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Anna Köttgen; Nicole L. Glazer; Abbas Dehghan; Shih Jen Hwang; Ronit Katz; Man Li; Qiong Yang; Vilmundur Gudnason; Lenore J. Launer; Tamara B. Harris; Albert V. Smith; Dan E. Arking; Brad C. Astor; Eric Boerwinkle; Georg B. Ehret; Ingo Ruczinski; Robert B. Scharpf; Yii-Der I. Chen; Ian H. de Boer; Talin Haritunians; Thomas Lumley; Mark J. Sarnak; David S. Siscovick; Emelia J. Benjamin; Daniel Levy; Ashish Upadhyay; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Albert Hofman; Fernando Rivadeneira; Andre G. Uitterlinden
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has a heritable component and is an important global public health problem because of its high prevalence and morbidity. We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to identify susceptibility loci for glomerular filtration rate, estimated by serum creatinine (eGFRcrea) and cystatin C (eGFRcys), and CKD (eGFRcrea < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2) in European-ancestry participants of four population-based cohorts (ARIC, CHS, FHS, RS; n = 19,877; 2,388 CKD cases), and tested for replication in 21,466 participants (1,932 CKD cases). We identified significant SNP associations (P < 5 × 10−8) with CKD at the UMOD locus, with eGFRcrea at UMOD, SHROOM3 and GATM-SPATA5L1, and with eGFRcys at CST and STC1. UMOD encodes the most common protein in human urine, Tamm-Horsfall protein, and rare mutations in UMOD cause mendelian forms of kidney disease. Our findings provide new insights into CKD pathogenesis and underscore the importance of common genetic variants influencing renal function and disease.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Owen M. Woodward; Anna Köttgen; Josef Coresh; Eric Boerwinkle; William B. Guggino; Michael Köttgen
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have successfully identified common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with a wide variety of complex diseases, but do not address gene function or establish causality of disease-associated SNPs. We recently used GWAS to identify SNPs in a genomic region on chromosome 4 that associate with serum urate levels and gout, a consequence of elevated urate levels. Here we show using functional assays that human ATP-binding cassette, subfamily G, 2 (ABCG2), encoded by the ABCG2 gene contained in this region, is a hitherto unknown urate efflux transporter. We further show that native ABCG2 is located in the brush border membrane of kidney proximal tubule cells, where it mediates renal urate secretion. Introduction of the mutation Q141K encoded by the common SNP rs2231142 by site-directed mutagenesis resulted in 53% reduced urate transport rates compared to wild-type ABCG2 (P < 0.001). Data from a population-based study of 14,783 individuals support rs2231142 as the causal variant in the region and show highly significant associations with urate levels [whites: P = 10−30, minor allele frequency (MAF) 0.11; blacks P = 10−4, MAF 0.03] and gout (adjusted odds ratio 1.68 per risk allele, both races). Our data indicate that at least 10% of all gout cases in whites are attributable to this causal variant. With approximately 3 million US individuals suffering from often insufficiently treated gout, ABCG2 represents an attractive drug target. Our study completes the chain of evidence from association to causation and supports the common disease-common variant hypothesis in the etiology of gout.
Nature Genetics | 2010
Patrick T. Ellinor; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Nicole L. Glazer; Arne Pfeufer; Alvaro Alonso; Mina K. Chung; Moritz F. Sinner; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Martina Mueller; Steven A. Lubitz; Ervin R. Fox; Dawood Darbar; Nicholas L. Smith; Jonathan D. Smith; Renate B. Schnabel; Elsayed Z. Soliman; Kenneth Rice; David R. Van Wagoner; Britt-M. Beckmann; Charlotte van Noord; Ke Wang; Georg Ehret; Jerome I. Rotter; Stanley L. Hazen; Gerhard Steinbeck; Albert V. Smith; Lenore J. Launer; Tamara B. Harris; Seiko Makino; Mari Nelis
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia. Previous studies have identified several genetic loci associated with typical AF. We sought to identify common genetic variants underlying lone AF. This condition affects a subset of individuals without overt heart disease and with an increased heritability of AF. We report a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies conducted using 1,335 individuals with lone AF (cases) and 12,844 unaffected individuals (referents). Cases were obtained from the German AF Network, Heart and Vascular Health Study, the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cleveland Clinic and Massachusetts General Hospital. We identified an association on chromosome 1q21 to lone AF (rs13376333, adjusted odds ratio = 1.56; P = 6.3 × 10−12), and we replicated this association in two independent cohorts with lone AF (overall combined odds ratio = 1.52, 95% CI 1.40–1.64; P = 1.83 × 10−21). rs13376333 is intronic to KCNN3, which encodes a potassium channel protein involved in atrial repolarization.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Arne Pfeufer; Serena Sanna; Dan E. Arking; Martina Müller; Vesela Gateva; Christian Fuchsberger; Georg B. Ehret; Marco Orru; Cristian Pattaro; Anna Köttgen; Siegfried Perz; Gianluca Usala; Maja Barbalic; Man Li; Benno Pütz; Angelo Scuteri; Ronald J. Prineas; Moritz F. Sinner; Christian Gieger; Samer S. Najjar; W.H. Linda Kao; Thomas W. Mühleisen; Mariano Dei; Christine Happle; Stefan Möhlenkamp; Laura Crisponi; Raimund Erbel; Karl-Heinz Jöckel; Silvia Naitza; Gerhard Steinbeck
The QT interval, a measure of cardiac repolarization, predisposes to ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death (SCD) when prolonged or shortened. A common variant in NOS1AP is known to influence repolarization. We analyze genome-wide data from five population-based cohorts (ARIC, KORA, SardiNIA, GenNOVA and HNR) with a total of 15,842 individuals of European ancestry, to confirm the NOS1AP association and identify nine additional loci at P < 5 × 10−8. Four loci map near the monogenic long-QT syndrome genes KCNQ1, KCNH2, SCN5A and KCNJ2. Two other loci include ATP1B1 and PLN, genes with established electrophysiological function, whereas three map to RNF207, near LITAF and within NDRG4-GINS3-SETD6-CNOT1, respectively, all of which have not previously been implicated in cardiac electrophysiology. These results, together with an accompanying paper from the QTGEN consortium, identify new candidate genes for ventricular arrhythmias and SCD.
Nature Genetics | 2010
Arne Pfeufer; Charlotte van Noord; Kristin D. Marciante; Dan E. Arking; Martin G. Larson; Albert V. Smith; Kirill V. Tarasov; Martina Müller; Nona Sotoodehnia; Moritz F. Sinner; Germaine C. Verwoert; Man Li; W.H. Linda Kao; Anna Köttgen; Josef Coresh; Joshua C. Bis; Bruce M. Psaty; Kenneth Rice; Jerome I. Rotter; Fernando Rivadeneira; Albert Hofman; Jan A. Kors; Bruno H. Stricker; André G. Uitterlinden; Cornelia M. van Duijn; Britt M. Beckmann; Wiebke Sauter; Christian Gieger; Steven A. Lubitz; Christopher Newton-Cheh
The electrocardiographic PR interval (or PQ interval) reflects atrial and atrioventricular nodal conduction, disturbances of which increase risk of atrial fibrillation. We report a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for PR interval from seven population-based European studies in the CHARGE Consortium: AGES, ARIC, CHS, FHS, KORA, Rotterdam Study, and SardiNIA (N = 28,517). We identified nine loci associated with PR interval at P < 5 × 10−8. At the 3p22.2 locus, we observed two independent associations in voltage-gated sodium channel genes, SCN10A and SCN5A. Six of the loci were near cardiac developmental genes, including CAV1-CAV2, NKX2-5 (CSX1), SOX5, WNT11, MEIS1, and TBX5-TBX3, providing pathophysiologically interesting candidate genes. Five of the loci, SCN5A, SCN10A, NKX2-5, CAV1-CAV2, and SOX5, were also associated with atrial fibrillation (N = 5,741 cases, P < 0.0056). This suggests a role for common variation in ion channel and developmental genes in atrial and atrioventricular conduction as well as in susceptibility to atrial fibrillation.
Nature Genetics | 2009
Santhi K. Ganesh; Neil A. Zakai; Frank J. A. van Rooij; Nicole Soranzo; Albert V. Smith; Michael A. Nalls; Ming-Huei Chen; Anna Köttgen; Nicole L. Glazer; Abbas Dehghan; Brigitte Kühnel; Thor Aspelund; Qiong Yang; Toshiko Tanaka; Andrew E. Jaffe; Joshua C. Bis; Germaine C. Verwoert; Alexander Teumer; Caroline S. Fox; Jack M. Guralnik; Georg B. Ehret; Kenneth Rice; Janine F. Felix; Augusto Rendon; Gudny Eiriksdottir; Daniel Levy; Kushang V. Patel; Eric Boerwinkle; Jerome I. Rotter; Albert Hofman
Measurements of erythrocytes within the blood are important clinical traits and can indicate various hematological disorders. We report here genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for six erythrocyte traits, including hemoglobin concentration (Hb), hematocrit (Hct), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and red blood cell count (RBC). We performed an initial GWAS in cohorts of the CHARGE Consortium totaling 24,167 individuals of European ancestry and replication in additional independent cohorts of the HaemGen Consortium totaling 9,456 individuals. We identified 23 loci significantly associated with these traits in a meta-analysis of the discovery and replication cohorts (combined P values ranging from 5 × 10−8 to 7 × 10−86). Our findings include loci previously associated with these traits (HBS1L-MYB, HFE, TMPRSS6, TFR2, SPTA1) as well as new associations (EPO, TFRC, SH2B3 and 15 other loci). This study has identified new determinants of erythrocyte traits, offering insight into common variants underlying variation in erythrocyte measures.