posted on 2013-11-01, 00:00authored byChristine E. McLaren, Stela McLachlan, Chad P. Garner, Chris D. Vulpe, Victor R. Gordeuk, John H. Eckfeldt, Paul C. Adams, Ronald T. Acton, Joseph A. Murray, Catherine Leiendecker-Foster, Beverly M. Snively, Lisa F. Barcellos, James D. Cook, Gordon D. McLaren
The existence of multiple inherited disorders of iron metabolism suggests genetic contributions to iron deficiency. We
previously performed a genome-wide association study of iron-related single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) using DNA
from white men aged ≥25 y and women ≥50 y in the Hemochromatosis and Iron Overload Screening (HEIRS) Study with
serum ferritin (SF) ≤12 mg/L (cases) and controls (SF > .100 mg/L in men, SF > .50 mg/L in women). We report a follow-up
study of white, African-American, Hispanic, and Asian HEIRS participants, analyzed for association between SNPs and eight
iron-related outcomes. Three chromosomal regions showed association across multiple populations, including SNPs in the
TF and TMPRSS6 genes, and on chromosome 18q21. A novel SNP rs1421312 in TMPRSS6 was associated with serum iron in
whites (p = 3.761026) and replicated in African Americans (p = 0.0012).Twenty SNPs in the TF gene region were associated
with total iron-binding capacity in whites (p < 4.461025); six SNPs replicated in other ethnicities (p < 0.01). SNP rs10904850 in
the CUBN gene on 10p13 was associated with serum iron in African Americans (P = 1.061025). These results confirm known
associations with iron measures and give unique evidence of their role in different ethnicities, suggesting origins in
a common founder.
Funding
Support was provided by grant R01 HL083328 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (C.E.M.), grant R01DK57892 from the United States
National Institutes of Health (J.A.M.), and by a Merit Review award from the Department of Veterans Affairs (G.D.M.). The HEIRS Study was initiated and funded by
NHLBI, in conjunction with NHGRI (National Human Genome Research Institute). Data collection for this study was supported by contracts N01-HC-05185
(University of Minnesota), N01-HC-05186 (Howard University), N01-HC-05188 (University of Alabama at Birmingham), N01-HC-05189 (Kaiser Permanente Center for
Health Research), N01-HC-05190 (University of California, Irvine), N01-HC-05191 (London Health Sciences Centre), and N01-HC-05192 (Wake Forest University). the
University of Alabama at Birmingham General Clinical Research Center (G.C.R.C.) grant M01-RR00032, Southern Iron Disorders Center (J.C.B.), Howard University
GCRC grant M01-RR10284, Howard University Research Scientist Award UH1-HL03679-05 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the Office of
Research on Minority Health (V.R.G.); and grant UC Irvine M01RR 00827-29 from the General Clinical Research Centers Program of the National Center for Research
Resources National Institutes of Health.