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Whole genome analysis of plasma fibrinogen reveals population-differentiated genetic regulators with putative liver roles.

Authors :
Huffman JE
Nicolas J
Hahn J
Heath AS
Raffield LM
Yanek LR
Brody JA
Thibord F
Almasy L
Bartz TM
Bielak LF
Bowler RP
Carrasquilla GD
Chasman DI
Chen MH
Emmert DB
Ghanbari M
Haessle J
Hottenga JJ
Kleber ME
Le NQ
Lee J
Lewis JP
Li-Gao R
Luan J
Malmberg A
Mangino M
Marioni RE
Martinez-Perez A
Pankratz N
Polasek O
Richmond A
Rodriguez BA
Rotter JI
Steri M
Suchon P
Trompet S
Weiss S
Zare M
Auer P
Cho MH
Christofidou P
Davies G
de Geus E
Deleuze JF
Delgado GE
Ekunwe L
Faraday N
Gögele M
Greinacher A
He G
Howard T
Joshi PK
Kilpeläinen TO
Lahti J
Linneberg A
Naitza S
Noordam R
Paüls-Vergés F
Rich SS
Rosendaal FR
Rudan I
Ryan KA
Souto JC
van Rooij FJ
Wang H
Zhao W
Becker LC
Beswick A
Brown MR
Cade BE
Campbell H
Cho K
Crapo JD
Curran JE
de Maat MP
Doyle M
Elliott P
Floyd JS
Fuchsberger C
Grarup N
Guo X
Harris SE
Hou L
Kolcic I
Kooperberg C
Menni C
Nauck M
O'Connell JR
Orrù V
Psaty BM
Räikkönen K
Smith JA
Soria JM
Stott DJ
van Hylckama Vlieg A
Watkins H
Willemsen G
Wilson P
Ben-Shlomo Y
Blangero J
Boomsma D
Cox SR
Dehghan A
Eriksson JG
Fiorillo E
Fornage M
Hansen T
Hayward C
Ikram MA
Jukema JW
Kardia SL
Lange LA
März W
Mathias RA
Mitchell BD
Mook-Kanamori DO
Morange PE
Pedersen O
Pramstaller PP
Redline S
Reiner A
Ridker PM
Silverman EK
Spector TD
Völker U
Wareham N
Wilson JF
Yao J
Trégouët DA
Johnson AD
Wolberg AS
de Vries PS
Sabater-Lleal M
Morrison AC
Smith NL
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2023 Jun 12. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jun 12.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Genetic studies have identified numerous regions associated with plasma fibrinogen levels in Europeans, yet missing heritability and limited inclusion of non-Europeans necessitates further studies with improved power and sensitivity. Compared with array-based genotyping, whole genome sequencing (WGS) data provides better coverage of the genome and better representation of non-European variants. To better understand the genetic landscape regulating plasma fibrinogen levels, we meta-analyzed WGS data from the NHLBI's Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) program (n=32,572), with array-based genotype data from the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium (n=131,340) imputed to the TOPMed or Haplotype Reference Consortium panel. We identified 18 loci that have not been identified in prior genetic studies of fibrinogen. Of these, four are driven by common variants of small effect with reported MAF at least 10% higher in African populations. Three ( SERPINA1, ZFP36L2 , and TLR10) signals contain predicted deleterious missense variants. Two loci, SOCS3 and HPN , each harbor two conditionally distinct, non-coding variants. The gene region encoding the protein chain subunits ( FGG;FGB;FGA ), contains 7 distinct signals, including one novel signal driven by rs28577061, a variant common (MAF=0.180) in African reference panels but extremely rare (MAF=0.008) in Europeans. Through phenome-wide association studies in the VA Million Veteran Program, we found associations between fibrinogen polygenic risk scores and thrombotic and inflammatory disease phenotypes, including an association with gout. Our findings demonstrate the utility of WGS to augment genetic discovery in diverse populations and offer new insights for putative mechanisms of fibrinogen regulation.<br />Key Points: Largest and most diverse genetic study of plasma fibrinogen identifies 54 regions (18 novel), housing 69 conditionally distinct variants (20 novel).Sufficient power achieved to identify signal driven by African population variant.Links to (1) liver enzyme, blood cell and lipid genetic signals, (2) liver regulatory elements, and (3) thrombotic and inflammatory disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
37398003
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.07.23291095