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Why does the X chromosome lag behind autosomes in GWAS findings?

Authors :
Ivan P. Gorlov
Christopher I. Amos
Source :
PLOS Genetics. 19:e1010472
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2023.

Abstract

The X-chromosome is among the largest human chromosomes. It differs from autosomes by a number of important features including hemizygosity in males, an almost complete inactivation of one copy in females, and unique patterns of recombination. We used data from the Catalog of Published Genome Wide Association Studies to compare densities of the GWAS-detected SNPs on the X-chromosome and autosomes. The density of GWAS-detected SNPs on the X-chromosome is 6-fold lower compared to the density of the GWAS-detected SNPs on autosomes. Differences between the X-chromosome and autosomes cannot be explained by differences in the overall SNP density, lower X-chromosome coverage by genotyping platforms or low call rate of X-chromosomal SNPs. Similar differences in the density of GWAS-detected SNPs were found in female-only GWASs (e.g. ovarian cancer GWASs). We hypothesized that the lower density of GWAS-detected SNPs on the X-chromosome compared to autosomes is not a result of a methodological bias, e.g. differences in coverage or call rates, but has a real underlying biological reason–a lower density of functional SNPs on the X-chromosome versus autosomes. This hypothesis is supported by the observation that (i) the overall SNP density of X-chromosome is lower compared to the SNP density on autosomes and that (ii) the density of genic SNPs on the X-chromosome is lower compared to autosomes while densities of intergenic SNPs are similar.

Details

ISSN :
15537404
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e9e23af0dd1939b2b851efe4009e3d05
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010472