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Dive into the research topics where Rona J. Strawbridge is active.

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Featured researches published by Rona J. Strawbridge.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

Apolipoprotein(a) genetic sequence variants associated with systemic atherosclerosis and coronary atherosclerotic burden but not with venous thromboembolism.

Anna Helgadottir; Solveig Gretarsdottir; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Hilma Holm; Riyaz S. Patel; Thorarinn Gudnason; Gregory T. Jones; Andre M. van Rij; Danny J. Eapen; Annette F. Baas; David-Alexandre Trégouët; Pierre-Emmanuel Morange; Joseph Emmerich; Bengt Lindblad; Anders Gottsäter; Lambertus A Kiemeny; Jes Sanddal Lindholt; Natzi Sakalihasan; Robert E. Ferrell; David J. Carey; James R. Elmore; Philip S. Tsao; Niels Grarup; Torben Jørgensen; Daniel R. Witte; Torben Hansen; Oluf Pedersen; Roberto Pola; Eleonora Gaetani; Hulda B Magnadottir

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study is investigate the effects of variants in the apolipoprotein(a) gene (LPA) on vascular diseases with different atherosclerotic and thrombotic components. BACKGROUND It is unclear whether the LPA variants rs10455872 and rs3798220, which correlate with lipoprotein(a) levels and coronary artery disease (CAD), confer susceptibility predominantly via atherosclerosis or thrombosis. METHODS The 2 LPA variants were combined and examined as LPA scores for the association with ischemic stroke (and TOAST [Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment] subtypes) (effective sample size [n(e)] = 9,396); peripheral arterial disease (n(e) = 5,215); abdominal aortic aneurysm (n(e) = 4,572); venous thromboembolism (n(e) = 4,607); intracranial aneurysm (n(e) = 1,328); CAD (n(e) = 12,716), carotid intima-media thickness (n = 3,714), and angiographic CAD severity (n = 5,588). RESULTS LPA score was associated with ischemic stroke subtype large artery atherosclerosis (odds ratio [OR]: 1.27; p = 6.7 × 10(-4)), peripheral artery disease (OR: 1.47; p = 2.9 × 10(-14)), and abdominal aortic aneurysm (OR: 1.23; p = 6.0 × 10(-5)), but not with the ischemic stroke subtypes cardioembolism (OR: 1.03; p = 0.69) or small vessel disease (OR: 1.06; p = 0.52). Although the LPA variants were not associated with carotid intima-media thickness, they were associated with the number of obstructed coronary vessels (p = 4.8 × 10(-12)). Furthermore, CAD cases carrying LPA risk variants had increased susceptibility to atherosclerotic manifestations outside of the coronary tree (OR: 1.26; p = 0.0010) and had earlier onset of CAD (-1.58 years/allele; p = 8.2 × 10(-8)) than CAD cases not carrying the risk variants. There was no association of LPA score with venous thromboembolism (OR: 0.97; p = 0.63) or intracranial aneurysm (OR: 0.85; p = 0.15). CONCLUSIONS LPA sequence variants were associated with atherosclerotic burden, but not with primarily thrombotic phenotypes.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2015

Sex-Specific Effects of Adiponectin on Carotid Intima-Media Thickness and Incident Cardiovascular Disease

Jonas Persson; Rona J. Strawbridge; Olga McLeod; Karl Gertow; Angela Silveira; Damiano Baldassarre; Natalie Van Zuydam; Sonia Shah; Cristiano Fava; Stefan Gustafsson; Fabrizio Veglia; Bengt Sennblad; Malin Larsson; Maria Sabater-Lleal; Karin Leander; Bruna Gigante; Adam G. Tabak; Mika Kivimäki; Jussi Kauhanen; Rainer Rauramaa; Andries J. Smit; Elmo Mannarino; Philippe Giral; Steve E. Humphries; Elena Tremoli; Ulf de Faire; Lars Lind; Erik Ingelsson; Bo Hedblad; Olle Melander

Background Plasma adiponectin levels have previously been inversely associated with carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis. In this study, we used a sex-stratified Mendelian randomization approach to investigate whether adiponectin has a causal protective influence on IMT. Methods and Results Baseline plasma adiponectin concentration was tested for association with baseline IMT, IMT progression over 30 months, and occurrence of cardiovascular events within 3 years in 3430 participants (women, n =1777; men, n =1653) with high cardiovascular risk but no prevalent disease. Plasma adiponectin levels were inversely associated with baseline mean bifurcation IMT after adjustment for established risk factors (β =−0.018, P<0.001) in men but not in women (β =−0.006, P =0.185; P for interaction =0.061). Adiponectin levels were inversely associated with progression of mean common carotid IMT in men (β =−0.0022, P =0.047), whereas no association was seen in women (0.0007, P =0.475; P for interaction =0.018). Moreover, we observed that adiponectin levels were inversely associated with coronary events in women (hazard ratio 0.57, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.87) but not in men (hazard ratio 0.82, 95% CI 0.54 to 1.25). A gene score of adiponectin-raising alleles in 6 loci, reported recently in a large multi-ethnic meta-analysis, was inversely associated with baseline mean bifurcation IMT in men (β =−0.0008, P =0.004) but not in women (β =−0.0003, P =0.522; P for interaction =0.007). Conclusions This report provides some evidence for adiponectin protecting against atherosclerosis, with effects being confined to men; however, compared with established cardiovascular risk factors, the effect of plasma adiponectin was modest. Further investigation involving mechanistic studies is warranted.


Blood | 2012

Genome-wide association study for circulating levels of PAI-1 provides novel insights into its regulation.

Jie Huang; Maria Sabater-Lleal; Folkert W. Asselbergs; David Tregouet; So-Youn Shin; Jingzhong Ding; Jens Baumert; Tiphaine Oudot-Mellakh; Lasse Folkersen; Andrew D. Johnson; Nicholas L. Smith; Scott M. Williams; Mohammad Arfan Ikram; Marcus E. Kleber; Diane M. Becker; Vinh Truong; Josyf C. Mychaleckyj; Weihong Tang; Qiong Yang; Bengt Sennblad; Jason H. Moore; Frances M. K. Williams; Abbas Dehghan; Günther Silbernagel; Elisabeth M.C. Schrijvers; Shelly Smith; Mahir Karakas; Geoffrey H. Tofler; Angela Silveira; Gerjan Navis

We conducted a genome-wide association study to identify novel associations between genetic variants and circulating plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) concentration, and examined functional implications of variants and genes that were discovered. A discovery meta-analysis was performed in 19 599 subjects, followed by replication analysis of genome-wide significant (P < 5 × 10(-8)) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 10 796 independent samples. We further examined associations with type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease, assessed the functional significance of the SNPs for gene expression in human tissues, and conducted RNA-silencing experiments for one novel association. We confirmed the association of the 4G/5G proxy SNP rs2227631 in the promoter region of SERPINE1 (7q22.1) and discovered genome-wide significant associations at 3 additional loci: chromosome 7q22.1 close to SERPINE1 (rs6976053, discovery P = 3.4 × 10(-10)); chromosome 11p15.2 within ARNTL (rs6486122, discovery P = 3.0 × 10(-8)); and chromosome 3p25.2 within PPARG (rs11128603, discovery P = 2.9 × 10(-8)). Replication was achieved for the 7q22.1 and 11p15.2 loci. There was nominal association with type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease at ARNTL (P < .05). Functional studies identified MUC3 as a candidate gene for the second association signal on 7q22.1. In summary, SNPs in SERPINE1 and ARNTL and an SNP associated with the expression of MUC3 were robustly associated with circulating levels of PAI-1.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

A candidate gene study of the type I interferon pathway implicates IKBKE and IL8 as risk loci for SLE

Johanna K. Sandling; Sophie Garnier; Snaevar Sigurdsson; Chuan Wang; Gunnel Nordmark; Iva Gunnarsson; Elisabet Svenungsson; Leonid Padyukov; Gunnar Sturfelt; Andreas Jönsen; Anders Bengtsson; Lennart Truedsson; Catharina Eriksson; Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist; Anders Mälarstig; Rona J. Strawbridge; Anders Hamsten; Lindsey A. Criswell; Robert R. Graham; Timothy W. Behrens; Maija-Leena Eloranta; Gunnar V. Alm; Lars Rönnblom; Ann-Christine Syvänen

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a systemic autoimmune disease in which the type I interferon pathway has a crucial role. We have previously shown that three genes in this pathway, IRF5, TYK2 and STAT4, are strongly associated with risk for SLE. Here, we investigated 78 genes involved in the type I interferon pathway to identify additional SLE susceptibility loci. First, we genotyped 896 single-nucleotide polymorphisms in these 78 genes and 14 other candidate genes in 482 Swedish SLE patients and 536 controls. Genes with P<0.01 in the initial screen were then followed up in 344 additional Swedish patients and 1299 controls. SNPs in the IKBKE, TANK, STAT1, IL8 and TRAF6 genes gave nominal signals of association with SLE in this extended Swedish cohort. To replicate these findings we extracted data from a genomewide association study on SLE performed in a US cohort. Combined analysis of the Swedish and US data, comprising a total of 2136 cases and 9694 controls, implicates IKBKE and IL8 as SLE susceptibility loci (Pmeta=0.00010 and Pmeta=0.00040, respectively). STAT1 was also associated with SLE in this cohort (Pmeta=3.3 × 10−5), but this association signal appears to be dependent of that previously reported for the neighbouring STAT4 gene. Our study suggests additional genes from the type I interferon system in SLE, and highlights genes in this pathway for further functional analysis.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2012

Common and Low-Frequency Genetic Variants in the PCSK9 Locus Influence Circulating PCSK9 Levels

Ekaterina Chernogubova; Rona J. Strawbridge; Hovsep Mahdessian; Anders Mälarstig; Sergey Krapivner; Bruna Gigante; Mai-Lis Hellénius; Ulf de Faire; Anders Franco-Cereceda; Ann-Christine Syvänen; Jason S. Troutt; Robert J. Konrad; Per Eriksson; Anders Hamsten; Ferdinand van’t Hooft

Objective —Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) is a circulating protein that influences plasma low-density lipoprotein concentration and susceptibility to coronary heart disease. Circulating PCSK9 levels show considerable interindividual differences, but the factors responsible for this variation are largely unknown. Methods and Results—We analyzed circulating PCSK9 levels in 4 cohorts of healthy, middle-aged Swedes (n=5722) and found that PCSK9 levels varied over ≈50-fold range, showed a positive relationship with plasma low-density lipoprotein–cholesterol concentration, and were associated with plasma triglyceride, fibrinogen, insulin, and glucose concentrations. A genome-wide association study conducted in 2 cohorts (n=1215) failed to uncover common genetic variants robustly associated with variation in circulating PCSK9 level. As expected, the minor allele of the PCSK9 R46L variant was in all cohorts associated with reduced PCSK9 levels and decreased plasma low-density lipoprotein–cholesterol concentrations, but no relationship was observed with the plasma triglyceride concentration. Further mapping of the PCSK9 locus revealed a common polymorphism (rs2479415, minor allele frequency 43.9%), located ≈6 kb upstream from PCSK9, which is independently associated with increased circulating PCSK9 levels. Conclusion—Common and low-frequency genetic variants in the PCSK9 locus influence the pronounced interindividual variation in circulating PCSK9 levels in healthy, middle-aged white (predominantly Swedish) subjects.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2016

NLRP3 Inflammasome Expression and Activation in Human Atherosclerosis

Geena Paramel Varghese; Lasse Folkersen; Rona J. Strawbridge; Bente Halvorsen; Arne Yndestad; Trine Ranheim; Kirsten Krohg-Sørensen; Mona Skjelland; Terje Espevik; P. Aukrust; Mariette Lengquist; Ulf Hedin; Jan‐Hååkan Jansson; Karin Fransén; Göran K. Hansson; Per Eriksson; Allan Sirsjö

Background The NLR family, pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome is an interleukin (IL)‐1β and IL‐18 cytokine processing complex that is activated in inflammatory conditions. The role of the NLRP3 inflammasome in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction is not fully understood. Methods and Results Atherosclerotic plaques were analyzed for transcripts of the NLRP3 inflammasome, and for IL‐1β release. The Swedish First‐ever myocardial Infarction study in Ac‐county (FIA) cohort consisting of DNA from 555 myocardial infarction patients and 1016 healthy individuals was used to determine the frequency of 4 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from the downstream regulatory region of NLRP3. Expression of NLRP3, Apoptosis‐associated speck‐like protein containing a CARD (ASC), caspase‐1 (CASP1), IL1B, and IL18 mRNA was significantly increased in atherosclerotic plaques compared to normal arteries. The expression of NLRP3 mRNA was significantly higher in plaques of symptomatic patients when compared to asymptomatic ones. CD68‐positive macrophages were observed in the same areas of atherosclerotic lesions as NLRP3 and ASC expression. Occasionally, expression of NLRP3 and ASC was also present in smooth muscle cells. Cholesterol crystals and ATP induced IL‐1β release from lipopolysaccharide‐primed human atherosclerotic lesion plaques. The minor alleles of the variants rs4266924, rs6672995, and rs10733113 were associated with NLRP3 mRNA levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells but not with the risk of myocardial infarction. Conclusions Our results indicate a possible role of the NLRP3 inflammasome and its genetic variants in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2013

Serum 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Concentration in Subclinical Carotid Atherosclerosis

Anna Deleskog; Olga Piksasova; Angela Silveira; Karl Gertow; Damiano Baldassarre; Fabrizio Veglia; Bengt Sennblad; Rona J. Strawbridge; Malin Larsson; Karin Leander; Bruna Gigante; Jussi Kauhanen; Rainer Rauramaa; Andries J. Smit; Elmo Mannarino; Philippe Giral; Sven A. Gustafsson; Claes Göran Östenson; Steve E. Humphries; Elena Tremoli; Ulf de Faire; John Öhrvik; Anders Hamsten

Objective—Vitamin D deficiency has been implicated in cardiovascular disease and is associated with multiple cardiovascular risk factors. We investigated the serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration in relation to latitude, baseline carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), and IMT progression, the carotid IMT measures being surrogate markers of subclinical atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease risk. Approach and Results—Serum 25(OH)D concentration was related to high-resolution carotid IMT measures in 3430 middle-aged and elderly subjects with high cardiovascular risk but no prevalent disease, who were recruited at 7 centers in Finland, Sweden, The Netherlands, France, and Italy. Participants underwent carotid ultrasound examination at baseline and at months 15 and 30 after entry into the study, whereas blood samples, clinical data, and information about lifestyle were collected at baseline. Serum 25(OH)D levels were positively associated with latitude (Jonckheere–Terpstra &khgr;=166.643; P<0.001) and, as previously reported, associated with a range of cardiovascular risk factors. There were no independent relationships between 25(OH)D and segment-specific or composite IMT measures in the entire cohort. In analyses stratified by sex, diabetes mellitus, and statin treatment, weak associations with some baseline and progression measures of carotid IMT were observed in males, diabetics, and nonstatin-treated individuals. Conclusions—Levels of 25(OH)D differed across Europe, were highest in the North, showed multiple associations with established and emerging cardiovascular risk factors but were not consistently, independently related to measures of carotid IMT. This argues against a protective role of vitamin D against subclinical atherosclerosis in high-risk individuals.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2012

Identification of the BCAR1-CFDP1-TMEM170A Locus as a Determinant of Carotid Intima-Media Thickness and Coronary Artery Disease Risk

Karl Gertow; Bengt Sennblad; Rona J. Strawbridge; John Öhrvik; Delilah Zabaneh; Sonia Shah; Fabrizio Veglia; Cristiano Fava; Maryam Kavousi; Stela McLachlan; Mika Kivimäki; Jennifer L. Bolton; Lasse Folkersen; Bruna Gigante; Karin Leander; Max Vikström; Malin Larsson; Angela Silveira; John Deanfield; Benjamin F. Voight; Pierre Fontanillas; Maria Sabater-Lleal; Gualtiero I. Colombo; Meena Kumari; Claudia Langenberg; Nicholas J. Wareham; André G. Uitterlinden; Anders Gabrielsen; Ulf Hedin; Anders Franco-Cereceda

Background—Carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) is a widely accepted marker of subclinical atherosclerosis. To date, large-scale investigations of genetic determinants of cIMT are sparse. Methods and Results—To identify cIMT-associated genes and genetic variants, a discovery analysis using the Illumina 200K CardioMetabochip was conducted in 3430 subjects with detailed ultrasonographic determinations of cIMT from the IMPROVE (Carotid Intima Media Thickness [IMT] and IMT-Progression as Predictors of Vascular Events in a High Risk European Population) study. Segment-specific IMT measurements of common carotid, bifurcation, and internal carotid arteries, and composite IMT variables considering the whole carotid tree (IMTmean, IMTmax, and IMTmean-max), were analyzed. A replication stage investigating 42 single-nucleotide polymorphisms for association with common carotid IMT was undertaken in 5 independent European cohorts (total n=11 590). A locus on chromosome 16 (lead single-nucleotide polymorphism rs4888378, intronic in CFDP1) was associated with cIMT at significance levels passing multiple testing correction at both stages (array-wide significant discovery P=6.75×10−7 for IMTmax; replication P=7.24×10−6 for common cIMT; adjustments for sex, age, and population substructure where applicable; minor allele frequency 0.43 and 0.41, respectively). The protective minor allele was associated with lower carotid plaque score in a replication cohort (P=0.04, n=2120) and lower coronary artery disease risk in 2 case-control studies of subjects with European ancestry (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] 0.83 [0.77–0.90], P=6.53×10−6, n=13 591; and 0.95 [0.92–0.98], P=1.83×10−4, n=82 297, respectively). Queries of human biobank data sets revealed associations of rs4888378 with nearby gene expression in vascular tissues (n=126–138). Conclusions—This study identified rs4888378 in the BCAR1-CFDP1-TMEM170A locus as a novel genetic determinant of cIMT and coronary artery disease risk in individuals of European descent.


Blood | 2015

Rare and low-frequency variants and their association with plasma levels of fibrinogen, FVII, FVIII, and vWF

Jennifer E. Huffman; Paul S. de Vries; Alanna C. Morrison; Maria Sabater-Lleal; Tim Kacprowski; Paul L. Auer; Jennifer A. Brody; Daniel I. Chasman; Ming-Huei Chen; Xiuqing Guo; Li An Lin; Riccardo E. Marioni; Martina Müller-Nurasyid; Lisa R. Yanek; Nathan Pankratz; Megan L. Grove; Moniek P.M. de Maat; Mary Cushman; Kerri L. Wiggins; Lihong Qi; Bengt Sennblad; Sarah E. Harris; Ozren Polasek; Helene Riess; Fernando Rivadeneira; Lynda M. Rose; Anuj Goel; Kent D. Taylor; Alexander Teumer; André G. Uitterlinden

Fibrinogen, coagulation factor VII (FVII), and factor VIII (FVIII) and its carrier von Willebrand factor (vWF) play key roles in hemostasis. Previously identified common variants explain only a small fraction of the trait heritabilities, and additional variations may be explained by associations with rarer variants with larger effects. The aim of this study was to identify low-frequency (minor allele frequency [MAF] ≥0.01 and <0.05) and rare (MAF <0.01) variants that influence plasma concentrations of these 4 hemostatic factors by meta-analyzing exome chip data from up to 76,000 participants of 4 ancestries. We identified 12 novel associations of low-frequency (n = 2) and rare (n = 10) variants across the fibrinogen, FVII, FVIII, and vWF traits that were independent of previously identified associations. Novel loci were found within previously reported genes and had effect sizes much larger than and independent of previously identified common variants. In addition, associations at KCNT1, HID1, and KATNB1 identified new candidate genes related to hemostasis for follow-up replication and functional genomic analysis. Newly identified low-frequency and rare-variant associations accounted for modest amounts of trait variance and therefore are unlikely to increase predicted trait heritability but provide new information for understanding individual variation in hemostasis pathways.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2015

Predicting venous thrombosis in women using a combination of genetic markers and clinical risk factors

Maria Bruzelius; Matteo Bottai; Maria Sabater-Lleal; Rona J. Strawbridge; Annica Bergendal; Angela Silveira; Anders Sundström; Helle Kieler; Anders Hamsten; Jacob Odeberg

Family history of venous thromboembolism (VTE) has been suggested to be more useful in risk assessment than thrombophilia testing.

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