跳至主導覽 跳至搜尋 跳過主要內容

Integrated multi-omics reveals population-specific mechanisms of cardiovascular disease in high-altitude environments

  • Weiyu Meng
  • , Jiajun Yang
  • , Xi Wang
  • , Xiaobing Zhai
  • , Gang Luo
  • , Yuyang Sha
  • , Hongxin Pan
  • , Wei Xu
  • , Henry H.Y. Tong
  • , Edmundo Patricio Lopes Lao
  • , Ci ren Zhong-ga
  • , Song Cui
  • , Xiantao Song
  • , Kefeng Li

研究成果: Article同行評審

摘要

High-altitude populations exhibit lower cardiovascular disease incidence and mortality with significant differences between indigenous highlanders and migrants. However, related genetic adaptation and population-specific mechanisms remain underexplored. We conducted a comprehensive multi-omics investigation of three cardiovascular disease patient cohorts from distinct altitudes: indigenous high-altitude residents (IHA, n = 31), high-altitude migrants (HAM, n = 18), and low-altitude residents (LAR, n = 50). IHA cardiovascular patients exhibited distinctive genetic signatures with significant enrichment of UGT1A family gene variants. Lipidomic profiling identified 118 differential lipid species between IHA and HAM patients, with significant enrichment in sphingolipid metabolism pathways. Integration of genomic and lipidomic data identified 102 significant gene-metabolite associations in IHA patients, particularly between UGT1A variants and sphingomyelin species. Comparative analysis with LAR patients revealed both shared and population-specific metabolic signatures. Our findings offer unique perspectives on cardiovascular disease in high-altitude environments, revealing complex interactions between genetic adaptation, environmental exposure, and disease pathophysiology.

原文English
文章編號115109
期刊iScience
29
發行號3
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 20 3月 2026

UN SDG

此研究成果有助於以下永續發展目標

  1. Good health and well being
    Good health and well being

指紋

深入研究「Integrated multi-omics reveals population-specific mechanisms of cardiovascular disease in high-altitude environments」主題。共同形成了獨特的指紋。

引用此