Journal Article10.1161/01.ATV.16.8.912
Evidence for a major gene elevating serum bilirubin concentration in Utah pedigrees
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TL;DR: It is concluded that there is a major gene modestly raising serum bilirubin levels and this major gene may be protective against CHD for about 12% of the persons in this study.
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Abstract: In case-control studies, lower serum bilirubin levels have been associated with increased risk of developing coronary heart disease (CHD). We have also previously shown that serum bilirubin has a significant polygenic component. The purpose of the present investigation was to determine whether there was statistical evidence for a major gene explaining a significant portion of individual variation in serum total bilirubin levels and whether this gene might alter the risk of CHD. Serum bilirubin measurements were obtained from 1240 adults in 84 Utah pedigrees screened twice: from 1980 to 1983 and again from 1983 to 1986. Bivariate maximum-likelihood segregation analysis of serum bilirubin levels obtained from the two clinic visits indicated that a major gene was responsible for elevated levels in 11.5% of the persons in these pedigrees. Phenotypic variations in visit 1 bilirubin arising from polygenes were highly correlated with the phenotypic variation due to polygenes in visit 2 bilirubin, indicating a stable genetic contribution to bilirubin over 2.5 years of follow-up. The major gene explained 27% and 28% of the variance in bilirubin levels at visit 1 and visit 2, respectively. There were no correlations of unmeasured environmental factors influencing bilirubin between the two clinic visits. At both visits, persons with early CHD had lower levels of bilirubin than unaffected persons ( P <.01). The odds ratio for the risk of CHD in the high-homozygote group was 0.31, P =.09. We conclude that there is a major gene modestly raising serum bilirubin levels. Since cross-sectional data indicate that low serum bilirubin levels increase the risk of CHD, this major gene may be protective against CHD for about 12% of the persons in this study.
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Citations
Association of Different Total Bilirubin Levels with Prognosis of Peritoneal Dialysis-Associated Peritonitis
TL;DR: The findings emphasize the need for further investigation in larger, multicenter prospective studies to validate and elucidate the mechanisms behind bilirubin’s impact on PDAP, potentially guiding the development of targeted therapeutic strategies.
Gilbert syndrome, UGT1A1*28 allele, and cardiovascular disease risk: possible protective effects and therapeutic applications of bilirubin.
Harvey A. Schwertner,Libor Vítek +1 more
TL;DR: This review will discuss the recent prospective studies on cardiovascular risk in individuals with Gilbert syndrome as well as those with the UGT1A1*28 allele and some of the therapeutic approaches that could be used to increase serum bilirubin concentrations to prevent CVD and other oxidative and inflammatory diseases.
Bilirubin and biliverdin treatment of atherosclerotic diseases.
Robert Öllinger,Kenichiro Yamashita,Martin Bilban,Anna Erat,Pamela Kogler,Michael Thomas,Eva Csizmadia,Anny Usheva,R Margreiter,Fritz H. Bach +9 more
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that bilirubin and its precursor biliverdin, would act to ameliorate components of atherosclerosis, in a manner similar to what has been shown with HO 1.
Exploring the genetic architecture of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia.
Jon F. Watchko,Zhili Lin +1 more
TL;DR: Variant gene co-expression including compound and synergistic heterozygosity enhances hyperbilirubinemia risk, contributing to the etiologic heterogeneity and complex nature of neonatal jaundice.
Association of plasma bilirubin with coronary heart disease and segregation of bilirubin as a major gene trait: the NHLBI family heart study.
Steven C. Hunt,Florian Kronenberg,John H. Eckfeldt,Paul N. Hopkins,Richard H. Myers,Gerardo Heiss +5 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that decreased bilirubin is mildly related to CHD in males but not in females, and the protective high HDL-C levels may have counteracted the CHD risk associated with lower bilirUBin levels in females.
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