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Your height affects your health: genetic determinants and health-related outcomes in Taiwan

Authors :
Jian-Shiun Chiou
Chi-Fung Cheng
Wen-Miin Liang
Chen-Hsing Chou
Chung-Hsing Wang
Wei-De Lin
Mu-Lin Chiu
Wei-Chung Cheng
Cheng-Wen Lin
Ting-Hsu Lin
Chiu-Chu Liao
Shao-Mei Huang
Chang-Hai Tsai
Ying-Ju Lin
Fuu-Jen Tsai
Source :
BMC Medicine. 20
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Background Height is an important anthropometric measurement and is associated with many health-related outcomes. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified hundreds of genetic loci associated with height, mainly in individuals of European ancestry. Methods We performed genome-wide association analyses and replicated previously reported GWAS-determined single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the Taiwanese Han population (Taiwan Biobank; n = 67,452). A genetic instrument composed of 251 SNPs was selected from our GWAS, based on height and replication results as the best-fit polygenic risk score (PRS), in accordance with the clumping and p-value threshold method. We also examined the association between genetically determined height (PRS251) and measured height (phenotype). We performed observational (phenotype) and genetic PRS251 association analyses of height and health-related outcomes. Results GWAS identified 6843 SNPs in 89 genomic regions with genome-wide significance, including 18 novel loci. These were the most strongly associated genetic loci (EFEMP1, DIS3L2, ZBTB38, LCORL, HMGA1, CS, and GDF5) previously reported to play a role in height. There was a positive association between PRS251 and measured height (p < 0.001). Of the 14 traits and 49 diseases analyzed, we observed significant associations of measured and genetically determined height with only eight traits (p < 0.05/[14 + 49]). Height was positively associated with body weight, waist circumference, and hip circumference but negatively associated with body mass index, waist-hip ratio, body fat, total cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (p < 0.05/[14 + 49]). Conclusions This study contributes to the understanding of the genetic features of height and health-related outcomes in individuals of Han Chinese ancestry in Taiwan.

Details

ISSN :
17417015
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df569e6adfdb6f12ed9526a827886211