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Heritability of platelet function in families with premature coronary artery disease
Author(s) -
BRAY P. F.,
MATHIAS R. A.,
FARADAY N.,
YANEK L. R.,
FALLIN M. D.,
HERRERAGALEANO J. E.,
WILSON A. F.,
BECKER L. C.,
BECKER D. M.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of thrombosis and haemostasis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.947
H-Index - 178
eISSN - 1538-7836
pISSN - 1538-7933
DOI - 10.1111/j.1538-7836.2007.02618.x
Subject(s) - platelet , heritability , medicine , coronary artery disease , epinephrine , genotype , biology , endocrinology , genetics , gene
Summary. Background: Variations in platelet function among individuals may be related to differences in platelet‐related genes. The major goal of our study was to estimate the contribution of inheritance to the variability in platelet function in unaffected individuals from white and African American families with premature coronary artery disease. Methods: Platelet reactivity, in the absence of antiplatelet agents, was assessed by in vitro aggregation and the platelet function analyzer closure time. Heritability was estimated using a variance components model. Results: Both white ( n = 687) and African American ( n = 321) subjects exhibited moderate to strong heritability ( h 2 ) for epinephrine‐ and adenosine diphosphate‐induced aggregation (0.36–0.42 for white and >0.71 for African American subjects), but heritability for collagen‐induced platelet aggregation in platelet‐rich plasma was prominent only in African American subjects. Platelet lag phase after collagen stimulation was heritable in both groups (0.47–0.50). A limited genotype analysis demonstrated that the C825T polymorphism of GNB3 was associated with the platelet aggregation response to 2 μM epinephrine, but the effect differed by race. Conclusions: Considering the few and modest genetic effects reported to affect platelet function, our findings suggest the likely existence of undiscovered important genes that modify platelet reactivity, some of which affect multiple aspects of platelet biology.