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Discovery and fine-mapping of adiposity loci using high density imputation of genome-wide association studies in individuals of African ancestry: African Ancestry Anthropometry Genetics Consortium.

Authors :
Ng MCY
Graff M
Lu Y
Justice AE
Mudgal P
Liu CT
Young K
Yanek LR
Feitosa MF
Wojczynski MK
Rand K
Brody JA
Cade BE
Dimitrov L
Duan Q
Guo X
Lange LA
Nalls MA
Okut H
Tajuddin SM
Tayo BO
Vedantam S
Bradfield JP
Chen G
Chen WM
Chesi A
Irvin MR
Padhukasahasram B
Smith JA
Zheng W
Allison MA
Ambrosone CB
Bandera EV
Bartz TM
Berndt SI
Bernstein L
Blot WJ
Bottinger EP
Carpten J
Chanock SJ
Chen YI
Conti DV
Cooper RS
Fornage M
Freedman BI
Garcia M
Goodman PJ
Hsu YH
Hu J
Huff CD
Ingles SA
John EM
Kittles R
Klein E
Li J
McKnight B
Nayak U
Nemesure B
Ogunniyi A
Olshan A
Press MF
Rohde R
Rybicki BA
Salako B
Sanderson M
Shao Y
Siscovick DS
Stanford JL
Stevens VL
Stram A
Strom SS
Vaidya D
Witte JS
Yao J
Zhu X
Ziegler RG
Zonderman AB
Adeyemo A
Ambs S
Cushman M
Faul JD
Hakonarson H
Levin AM
Nathanson KL
Ware EB
Weir DR
Zhao W
Zhi D
Arnett DK
Grant SFA
Kardia SLR
Oloapde OI
Rao DC
Rotimi CN
Sale MM
Williams LK
Zemel BS
Becker DM
Borecki IB
Evans MK
Harris TB
Hirschhorn JN
Li Y
Patel SR
Psaty BM
Rotter JI
Wilson JG
Bowden DW
Cupples LA
Haiman CA
Loos RJF
North KE
Source :
PLoS genetics [PLoS Genet] 2017 Apr 21; Vol. 13 (4), pp. e1006719. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Apr 21 (Print Publication: 2017).
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified >300 loci associated with measures of adiposity including body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (adjusted for BMI, WHRadjBMI), but few have been identified through screening of the African ancestry genomes. We performed large scale meta-analyses and replications in up to 52,895 individuals for BMI and up to 23,095 individuals for WHRadjBMI from the African Ancestry Anthropometry Genetics Consortium (AAAGC) using 1000 Genomes phase 1 imputed GWAS to improve coverage of both common and low frequency variants in the low linkage disequilibrium African ancestry genomes. In the sex-combined analyses, we identified one novel locus (TCF7L2/HABP2) for WHRadjBMI and eight previously established loci at P < 5×10-8: seven for BMI, and one for WHRadjBMI in African ancestry individuals. An additional novel locus (SPRYD7/DLEU2) was identified for WHRadjBMI when combined with European GWAS. In the sex-stratified analyses, we identified three novel loci for BMI (INTS10/LPL and MLC1 in men, IRX4/IRX2 in women) and four for WHRadjBMI (SSX2IP, CASC8, PDE3B and ZDHHC1/HSD11B2 in women) in individuals of African ancestry or both African and European ancestry. For four of the novel variants, the minor allele frequency was low (<5%). In the trans-ethnic fine mapping of 47 BMI loci and 27 WHRadjBMI loci that were locus-wide significant (P < 0.05 adjusted for effective number of variants per locus) from the African ancestry sex-combined and sex-stratified analyses, 26 BMI loci and 17 WHRadjBMI loci contained ≤ 20 variants in the credible sets that jointly account for 99% posterior probability of driving the associations. The lead variants in 13 of these loci had a high probability of being causal. As compared to our previous HapMap imputed GWAS for BMI and WHRadjBMI including up to 71,412 and 27,350 African ancestry individuals, respectively, our results suggest that 1000 Genomes imputation showed modest improvement in identifying GWAS loci including low frequency variants. Trans-ethnic meta-analyses further improved fine mapping of putative causal variants in loci shared between the African and European ancestry populations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1553-7404
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
PLoS genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28430825
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006719