| Literature DB >> 17767157 |
Michael N Weedon1, Guillaume Lettre, Rachel M Freathy, Cecilia M Lindgren, Benjamin F Voight, John R B Perry, Katherine S Elliott, Rachel Hackett, Candace Guiducci, Beverley Shields, Eleftheria Zeggini, Hana Lango, Valeriya Lyssenko, Nicholas J Timpson, Noel P Burtt, Nigel W Rayner, Richa Saxena, Kristin Ardlie, Jonathan H Tobias, Andrew R Ness, Susan M Ring, Colin N A Palmer, Andrew D Morris, Leena Peltonen, Veikko Salomaa, George Davey Smith, Leif C Groop, Andrew T Hattersley, Mark I McCarthy, Joel N Hirschhorn, Timothy M Frayling.
Abstract
Human height is a classic, highly heritable quantitative trait. To begin to identify genetic variants influencing height, we examined genome-wide association data from 4,921 individuals. Common variants in the HMGA2 oncogene, exemplified by rs1042725, were associated with height (P = 4 x 10(-8)). HMGA2 is also a strong biological candidate for height, as rare, severe mutations in this gene alter body size in mice and humans, so we tested rs1042725 in additional samples. We confirmed the association in 19,064 adults from four further studies (P = 3 x 10(-11), overall P = 4 x 10(-16), including the genome-wide association data). We also observed the association in children (P = 1 x 10(-6), N = 6,827) and a tall/short case-control study (P = 4 x 10(-6), N = 3,207). We estimate that rs1042725 explains approximately 0.3% of population variation in height (approximately 0.4 cm increased adult height per C allele). There are few examples of common genetic variants reproducibly associated with human quantitativetraits; these results represent, to our knowledge, the first consistently replicated association with adult and childhood height.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17767157 PMCID: PMC3086278 DOI: 10.1038/ng2121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330