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Featured researches published by Stefan Weiss.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Meta-analysis identifies common and rare variants influencing blood pressure and overlapping with metabolic trait loci

Chunyu Liu; Aldi T. Kraja; Jennifer A. Smith; Jennifer A. Brody; Nora Franceschini; Joshua C. Bis; Kenneth Rice; Alanna C. Morrison; Yingchang Lu; Stefan Weiss; Xiuqing Guo; Walter Palmas; Lisa W. Martin; Yii-Der Ida Chen; Praveen Surendran; Fotios Drenos; James P. Cook; Paul L. Auer; Audrey Y. Chu; Ayush Giri; Wei Zhao; Johanna Jakobsdottir; Li An Lin; Jeanette M. Stafford; Najaf Amin; Hao Mei; Jie Yao; Arend Voorman; Martin G. Larson; Megan L. Grove

Meta-analyses of association results for blood pressure using exome-centric single-variant and gene-based tests identified 31 new loci in a discovery stage among 146,562 individuals, with follow-up and meta-analysis in 180,726 additional individuals (total n = 327,288). These blood pressure–associated loci are enriched for known variants for cardiometabolic traits. Associations were also observed for the aggregation of rare and low-frequency missense variants in three genes, NPR1, DBH, and PTPMT1. In addition, blood pressure associations at 39 previously reported loci were confirmed. The identified variants implicate biological pathways related to cardiometabolic traits, vascular function, and development. Several new variants are inferred to have roles in transcription or as hubs in protein–protein interaction networks. Genetic risk scores constructed from the identified variants were strongly associated with coronary disease and myocardial infarction. This large collection of blood pressure–associated loci suggests new therapeutic strategies for hypertension, emphasizing a link with cardiometabolic risk.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016

Molecular epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus in the general population in Northeast Germany – results of the Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-TREND-0)

Silva Holtfreter; Dorothee Grumann; Veronika Balau; Annette Barwich; Julia Kolata; André Goehler; Stefan Weiss; Birte Holtfreter; Stephanie S. Bauerfeind; Paula Döring; Erika Friebe; Nicole Haasler; Kristin Henselin; Katrin Kühn; Sophie Nowotny; Dörte Radke; Katrin Schulz; Sebastian R. Schulz; Patricia Trübe; Chi Hai Vu; Birgit Walther; Susanne Westphal; Christiane Cuny; Wolfgang Witte; Henry Völzke; Hans J. Grabe; Thomas Kocher; Ivo Steinmetz; Barbara M. Bröker

ABSTRACT Population-based studies on Staphylococcus aureus nasal colonization are scarce. We examined the prevalence, resistance, and molecular diversity of S. aureus in the general population in Northeast Germany. Nasal swabs were obtained from 3,891 adults in the large-scale population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-TREND). Isolates were characterized using spa genotyping, as well as antibiotic resistance and virulence gene profiling. We observed an S. aureus prevalence of 27.2%. Nasal S. aureus carriage was associated with male sex and inversely correlated with age. Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) accounted for 0.95% of the colonizing S. aureus strains. MRSA carriage was associated with frequent visits to hospitals, nursing homes, or retirement homes within the previous 24 months. All MRSA strains were resistant to multiple antibiotics. Most MRSA isolates belonged to the pandemic European hospital-acquired MRSA sequence type 22 (HA-MRSA-ST22) lineage. We also detected one livestock-associated MRSA ST398 (LA-MRSA-ST398) isolate, as well as six livestock-associated methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (LA-MSSA) isolates (clonal complex 1 [CC1], CC97, and CC398). spa typing revealed a diverse but also highly clonal S. aureus population structure. We identified a total of 357 spa types, which were grouped into 30 CCs or sequence types. The major seven CCs (CC30, CC45, CC15, CC8, CC7, CC22, and CC25) included 75% of all isolates. Virulence gene patterns were strongly linked to the clonal background. In conclusion, MSSA and MRSA prevalences and the molecular diversity of S. aureus in Northeast Germany are consistent with those of other European countries. The detection of HA-MRSA and LA-MRSA within the general population indicates possible transmission from hospitals and livestock, respectively, and should be closely monitored.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2016

Multiethnic Exome-Wide Association Study of Subclinical Atherosclerosis

Pradeep Natarajan; Joshua C. Bis; Lawrence F. Bielak; Amanda J. Cox; Marcus Dörr; Mary F. Feitosa; Nora Franceschini; Xiuqing Guo; Shih Jen Hwang; Aaron Isaacs; Min A. Jhun; Maryam Kavousi; Ruifang Li-Gao; Leo-Pekka Lyytikäinen; Riccardo E. Marioni; Ulf Schminke; Nathan O. Stitziel; Hayato Tada; Jessica van Setten; Albert V. Smith; Dina Vojinovic; Lisa R. Yanek; Jie Yao; Laura M. Yerges-Armstrong; Najaf Amin; Usman Baber; Ingrid B. Borecki; J. Jeffrey Carr; Yii-Der Ida Chen; L. Adrienne Cupples

Background—The burden of subclinical atherosclerosis in asymptomatic individuals is heritable and associated with elevated risk of developing clinical coronary heart disease. We sought to identify genetic variants in protein-coding regions associated with subclinical atherosclerosis and the risk of subsequent coronary heart disease. Methods and Results—We studied a total of 25u2009109 European ancestry and African ancestry participants with coronary artery calcification (CAC) measured by cardiac computed tomography and 52u2009869 participants with common carotid intima–media thickness measured by ultrasonography within the CHARGE Consortium (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology). Participants were genotyped for 247u2009870 DNA sequence variants (231u2009539 in exons) across the genome. A meta-analysis of exome-wide association studies was performed across cohorts for CAC and carotid intima–media thickness. APOB p.Arg3527Gln was associated with 4-fold excess CAC (P=3×10−10). The APOE &egr;2 allele (p.Arg176Cys) was associated with both 22.3% reduced CAC (P=1×10−12) and 1.4% reduced carotid intima–media thickness (P=4×10−14) in carriers compared with noncarriers. In secondary analyses conditioning on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration, the &egr;2 protective association with CAC, although attenuated, remained strongly significant. Additionally, the presence of &egr;2 was associated with reduced risk for coronary heart disease (odds ratio 0.77; P=1×10−11). Conclusions—Exome-wide association meta-analysis demonstrates that protein-coding variants in APOB and APOE associate with subclinical atherosclerosis. APOE &egr;2 represents the first significant association for multiple subclinical atherosclerosis traits across multiple ethnicities, as well as clinical coronary heart disease.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Gene-gene Interaction Analyses for Atrial Fibrillation

Honghuang Lin; Martina Mueller-Nurasyid; Albert V. Smith; Dan E. Arking; John Barnard; Traci M. Bartz; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Kurt Lohman; Marcus E. Kleber; Steven A. Lubitz; Bastiaan Geelhoed; Stella Trompet; Maartje N. Niemeijer; Tim Kacprowski; Daniel I. Chasman; Derek Klarin; Moritz F. Sinner; Melanie Waldenberger; Thomas Meitinger; Tamara B. Harris; Lenore J. Launer; Elsayed Z. Soliman; Lin Y. Chen; Jonathan D. Smith; David R. Van Wagoner; Jerome I. Rotter; Bruce M. Psaty; Zhijun Xie; Audrey E. Hendricks; Jingzhong Ding

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a heritable disease that affects more than thirty million individuals worldwide. Extensive efforts have been devoted to the study of genetic determinants of AF. The objective of our study is to examine the effect of gene-gene interaction on AF susceptibility. We performed a large-scale association analysis of gene-gene interactions with AF in 8,173 AF cases, and 65,237 AF-free referents collected from 15 studies for discovery. We examined putative interactions between genome-wide SNPs and 17 known AF-related SNPs. The top interactions were then tested for association in an independent cohort for replication, which included more than 2,363 AF cases and 114,746 AF-free referents. One interaction, between rs7164883 at the HCN4 locus and rs4980345 at the SLC28A1 locus, was found to be significantly associated with AF in the discovery cohorts (interaction ORu2009=u20091.44, 95% CI: 1.27–1.65, Pu2009=u20094.3u2009×u200910–8). Eight additional gene-gene interactions were also marginally significant (Pu2009<u20095u2009×u200910–7). However, none of the top interactions were replicated. In summary, we did not find significant interactions that were associated with AF susceptibility. Future increases in sample size and denser genotyping might facilitate the identification of gene-gene interactions associated with AF.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2018

ExomeChip-Wide Analysis of 95 626 Individuals Identifies 10 Novel Loci Associated With QT and JT Intervals

Nathan A. Bihlmeyer; Jennifer A. Brody; Albert V. Smith; Helen R. Warren; Honghuang Lin; Aaron Isaacs; Ching-Ti Liu; Jonathan Marten; Farid Radmanesh; Leanne M. Hall; Niels Grarup; Hao Mei; Martina Müller-Nurasyid; Jennifer E. Huffman; Niek Verweij; Xiuqing Guo; Jie Yao; Ruifang Li-Gao; Marten E. van den Berg; Stefan Weiss; Bram P. Prins; Jessica van Setten; Jeffrey Haessler; Leo-Pekka Lyytikäinen; Man Li; Alvaro Alonso; Elsayed Z. Soliman; Joshua C. Bis; Tom Austin; Yii-Der I. Chen

Background: QT interval, measured through a standard ECG, captures the time it takes for the cardiac ventricles to depolarize and repolarize. JT interval is the component of the QT interval that reflects ventricular repolarization alone. Prolonged QT interval has been linked to higher risk of sudden cardiac arrest. Methods and Results: We performed an ExomeChip-wide analysis for both QT and JT intervals, including 209 449 variants, both common and rare, in 17 341 genes from the Illumina Infinium HumanExome BeadChip. We identified 10 loci that modulate QT and JT interval duration that have not been previously reported in the literature using single-variant statistical models in a meta-analysis of 95 626 individuals from 23 cohorts (comprised 83 884 European ancestry individuals, 9610 blacks, 1382 Hispanics, and 750 Asians). This brings the total number of ventricular repolarization associated loci to 45. In addition, our approach of using coding variants has highlighted the role of 17 specific genes for involvement in ventricular repolarization, 7 of which are in novel loci. Conclusions: Our analyses show a role for myocyte internal structure and interconnections in modulating QT interval duration, adding to previous known roles of potassium, sodium, and calcium ion regulation, as well as autonomic control. We anticipate that these discoveries will open new paths to the goal of making novel remedies for the prevention of lethal ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac arrest.

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Jie Yao

University of California

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Joshua C. Bis

University of Washington

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Xiuqing Guo

Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute

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Hao Mei

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Nora Franceschini

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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