The STANISLAS Cohort: a 10-year follow-up of supposed healthy families. Gene-environment interactions, reference values and evaluation of biomarkers in prevention of cardiovascular diseases
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Sophie Visvikis-Siest
und Gérard Siest
Abstract
The description of this familial longitudinal cohort was published in this journal 10 years ago, in 1998. To date, 117 publications on the STANISLAS Cohort (SC) have appeared, corresponding to five main categories of results: familial resemblance and heritability; genetics and gene-environment interactions; mRNA and proteins as gene products; reference values and biological variations of proteins; and finally preventive medicine and prepathological epidemiological data. More than 600 data values on demographic and laboratory data have been collected on each individual taking part out of the 1006 families at the beginning and for all three recruitments. Serum and plasma are stored in liquid nitrogen for all participants for all three recruitments. DNA has been extracted from all participants and mRNA from 357 families. They are stored at −80°C. Owing to the SC study, heritability and many gene-environment interactions have been described. The expression of 166 genes related to cardiovascular diseases was measured in peripheral blood mononuclear cells RNA. Reference values for proteins and vitamins have been established in addition to reference values for the carotid and femoral intima media thickness in adults and children. The data obtained contribute to a better understanding of the relation between the studied polymorphisms (161 polymorphic sites) and health, and predisposition to obesity, high blood pressure and metabolic syndrome. To the best of our knowledge, the SC study is internationally the only longitudinal family cohort of subjects who are presumed to be healthy, which enables the study of the chain DNA-RNA-proteins.
Clin Chem Lab Med 2008;46:733–47.
©2008 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Reviews
- The STANISLAS Cohort: a 10-year follow-up of supposed healthy families. Gene-environment interactions, reference values and evaluation of biomarkers in prevention of cardiovascular diseases
- Cardiovascular biomarkers: increasing impact of laboratory medicine in cardiology practice
- Haemolysis: an overview of the leading cause of unsuitable specimens in clinical laboratories
- Cardiovascular Diseases
- APOA5 Ala315>Val, identified in patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia, is a common mutation with no major effects on plasma lipid levels
- Gender-modulated impact of apolipoprotein A5 gene (APOA5) −1131T>C and c.56C>G polymorphisms on lipids, dyslipidemia and metabolic syndrome in Turkish adults
- Oxidative stress markers, C-reactive protein and heat shock protein 70 levels in subjects with metabolic syndrome
- Development of sensitive and specific age- and gender-specific low-density lipoprotein cholesterol cutoffs for diagnosis of first-degree relatives with familial hypercholesterolaemia in cascade testing
- Distribution of plasma cardiac troponin I values in healthy subjects: pathophysiological considerations
- High-density lipoprotein cholesterol and paraoxonase 1 (PON1) genetics and serum PON1 activity in prepubertal children in Spain
- Genetics and Molecular Diagnostics
- Polymorphisms of CYP17A1, CYP19, and androgen in Brazilian women with uterine leiomyomas
- A novel MEN1 frameshift germline mutation in two Italian monozygotic twins
- The silent hemoglobin α chain variant Hb Riccarton [α51(CE9)Gly→Ser] may affect HbA1c determination on the HLC-723 G7 analyzer
- General Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
- Urinary fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase activity as a marker of the damage to the renal proximal tubules in children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome
- Antioxidant defense capacity in scleroderma patients
- Correction of ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples for blood content does not increase sensitivity and specificity for the detection of CSF infection
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- A laboratory-based risk score for medical intensive care patients
- Analytical performance evaluation of the Cobas 6000 analyzer – special emphasis on trueness verification
- Letters to the Editor
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- Reliability of M protein quantification: comparison of two peak integration methods on Capillarys 2
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