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Published Online
on February 7, 2008

Hypertension. 2008
Published online before print February 7, 2008, doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.105247
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2008
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Submitted on November 19, 2007
Revised on December 17, 2007

Systematic, Genome-Wide, Sex-Specific Linkage of Cardiovascular Traits in French Canadians

Ondrej Seda; Johanne Tremblay; Daniel Gaudet; Pierre-Luc Brunelle; Alexandru Gurau; Ettore Merlo; Louise Pilote; Sergei N. Orlov; Francis Boulva; Milan Petrovich; Theodore A. Kotchen; Allen W. Cowley Jr; and Pavel Hamet*

From the Centre de Recherche (O.S., J.T., P-L.B., A.G., S.N.O., F.B., P.H.), Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montre'al-Technôpole Angus, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Complexe Hospitalier de la Sagamie (D.G.), Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada; É cole Polytechnique de Montreal (E.M.), Montreal, Quebec, Canada; McGill University Health Center (L.P.), Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and the Medical College of Wisconsin (T.A.K., A.W.C.), Milwaukee, Wis.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: pavel.hamet{at}umontreal.ca.

Abstract—The sexual dimorphism of cardiovascular traits, as well as susceptibility to a variety of related diseases, has long been recognized, yet their sex-specific genomic determinants are largely unknown. We systematically assessed the sex-specific heritability and linkage of 539 hemodynamic, metabolic, anthropometric, and humoral traits in 120 French-Canadian families from the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region of Quebec, Canada. We performed multipoint linkage analysis using microsatellite markers followed by peak-wide linkage scan based on Affymetrix Human Mapping 50K Array Xba240 single nucleotide polymorphism genotypes in 3 settings, including the entire sample and then separately in men and women. Nearly one half of the traits were age and sex independent, one quarter were both age and sex dependent, and one eighth were exclusively age or sex dependent. Sex-specific phenotypes are most frequent in heart rate and blood pressure categories, whereas sex- and age-independent determinants are predominant among humoral and biochemical parameters. Twenty sex-specific loci passing multiple testing criteria were corroborated by 2-point single nucleotide polymorphism linkage. Several resting systolic blood pressure measurements showed significant genotype-by-sex interaction, eg, male-specific locus at chromosome 12 (male-female logarithm of odds difference: 4.16; interaction P=0.0002), which was undetectable in the entire population, even after adjustment for sex. Detailed interrogation of this locus revealed a 220-kb block overlapping parts of TAO-kinase 3 and SUDS3 genes. In summary, a large number of complex cardiovascular traits display significant sexual dimorphism, for which we have demonstrated genomic determinants at the haplotype level. Many of these would have been missed in a traditional, sex-adjusted setting.


Key words: sex dimorphism • genetic linkage • single nucleotide polymorphisms • cardiovascular disease