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Genome-wide association study of telomere length among South Asians identifies a second RTEL1 association signal

Authors :
Hasan Shahriar
Shantanu Roy
Brandon L. Pierce
Tariqul Islam
Dayana A. Delgado
Mekala Sabarinathan
Alauddin Ahmed
Muhammad G. Kibriya
Jianjun Gao
Mahfuzar Rahman
Lin Chen
Justin Shinkle
Golam Sarwar
Mohammad Yunus
Chenan Zhang
Farzana Jasmine
Muhammad Rakibuz-Zaman
Maria Argos
Habibul Ahsan
Lin Tong
Source :
Journal of Medical Genetics
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2017.

Abstract

BackgroundLeucocyte telomere length (TL) is a potential biomarker of ageing and risk for age-related disease. Leucocyte TL is heritable and shows substantial differences by race/ethnicity. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) report ~10 loci harbouring SNPs associated with leucocyte TL, but these studies focus primarily on populations of European ancestry.ObjectiveThis study aims to enhance our understanding of genetic determinants of TL across populations.MethodsWe performed a GWAS of TL using data on 5075 Bangladeshi adults. We measured TL using one of two technologies (qPCR or a Luminex-based method) and used standardised variables as TL phenotypes.ResultsOur results replicate previously reported associations in the TERC and TERT regions (P=2.2×10−8 and P=6.4×10−6, respectively). We observed a novel association signal in the RTEL1 gene (intronic SNP rs2297439; P=2.82×10−7) that is independent of previously reported TL-associated SNPs in this region. The minor allele for rs2297439 is common in South Asian populations (≥0.25) but at lower frequencies in other populations (eg, 0.07 in Northern Europeans). Among the eight other previously reported association signals, all were directionally consistent with our study, but only rs8105767 (ZNF208) was nominally significant (P=0.003). SNP-based heritability estimates were as high as 44% when analysing close relatives but much lower when analysing distant relatives only.ConclusionsIn this first GWAS of TL in a South Asian population, we replicate some, but not all, of the loci reported in prior GWAS of individuals of European ancestry, and we identify a novel second association signal at the RTEL1 locus.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14686244 and 00222593
Volume :
55
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3056ca76cc4b926edf355b247f3b224e