Published 2017 | Version v1
Publication

Impact of CD14 Polymorphisms on Anti-Apo A-1 (Apolipoprotein A-1) IgG-Related Coronary Artery Disease Prediction in the General Population

Description

OBJECTIVE: We aimed to determine whether autoantibodies against apoA-1 (apolipoprotein A-1; anti-apoA-1 IgG) predict incident coronary artery disease (CAD), defined as adjudicated incident myocardial infarction, angina, percutaneous coronary revascularization, or bypass grafting, in the general population. We further investigated whether this association is modulated by a functional CD14 receptor single nucleotide polymorphism. APPROACH AND RESULTS: In a prospectively studied, population-based cohort of 5220 subjects (mean age 52.6±10.7 years, 47.4% males), followed over a median period of 5.6 years, subjects positive versus negative for anti-apoA-1 IgG presented a total CAD rate of 3.9% versus 2.8% (P=0.077) and a nonfatal CAD rate of 3.6% versus 2.3% (P=0.018), respectively. After multivariate adjustment, the hazard ratio of anti-apoA-1 IgG were as follows: hazard ratio=1.36 (95% confidence interval, 0.94-1.97; P=0.105) and hazard ratio=1.53 (95% confidence interval, 1.03-2.26; P=0.034) for total and nonfatal CAD, respectively. In subjects with available genetic data for the C260T rs2569190 single nucleotide polymorphism in the CD14 receptor gene (n=4247), we observed a significant interaction between anti-apoA-1 IgG and rs2569190 allele status with regards to CAD risk, with anti-apoA-1 IgG conferring the highest risk for total and nonfatal CAD in non-TT carriers, whereas being associated with the lowest risk for total and nonfatal CAD in TT homozygotes (P for interaction =0.011 and P for interaction =0.033, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Anti-apoA-1 IgG are independent predictors of nonfatal incident CAD in the general population. The strength of this association is dependent on a functional polymorphism of the CD14 receptor gene, a finding suggesting a gene-autoantibody interaction for the development of CAD.

Additional details

Created:
April 14, 2023
Modified:
November 28, 2023