| Literature DB >> 21998595 |
Amidou N'Diaye1, Gary K Chen, Cameron D Palmer, Bing Ge, Bamidele Tayo, Rasika A Mathias, Jingzhong Ding, Michael A Nalls, Adebowale Adeyemo, Véronique Adoue, Christine B Ambrosone, Larry Atwood, Elisa V Bandera, Lewis C Becker, Sonja I Berndt, Leslie Bernstein, William J Blot, Eric Boerwinkle, Angela Britton, Graham Casey, Stephen J Chanock, Ellen Demerath, Sandra L Deming, W Ryan Diver, Caroline Fox, Tamara B Harris, Dena G Hernandez, Jennifer J Hu, Sue A Ingles, Esther M John, Craig Johnson, Brendan Keating, Rick A Kittles, Laurence N Kolonel, Stephen B Kritchevsky, Loic Le Marchand, Kurt Lohman, Jiankang Liu, Robert C Millikan, Adam Murphy, Solomon Musani, Christine Neslund-Dudas, Kari E North, Sarah Nyante, Adesola Ogunniyi, Elaine A Ostrander, George Papanicolaou, Sanjay Patel, Curtis A Pettaway, Michael F Press, Susan Redline, Jorge L Rodriguez-Gil, Charles Rotimi, Benjamin A Rybicki, Babatunde Salako, Pamela J Schreiner, Lisa B Signorello, Andrew B Singleton, Janet L Stanford, Alex H Stram, Daniel O Stram, Sara S Strom, Bhoom Suktitipat, Michael J Thun, John S Witte, Lisa R Yanek, Regina G Ziegler, Wei Zheng, Xiaofeng Zhu, Joseph M Zmuda, Alan B Zonderman, Michele K Evans, Yongmei Liu, Diane M Becker, Richard S Cooper, Tomi Pastinen, Brian E Henderson, Joel N Hirschhorn, Guillaume Lettre, Christopher A Haiman.
Abstract
Adult height is a classic polygenic trait of high heritability (h(2) approximately 0.8). More than 180 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), identified mostly in populations of European descent, are associated with height. These variants convey modest effects and explain approximately10% of the variance in height. Discovery efforts in other populations, while limited, have revealed loci for height not previously implicated in individuals of European ancestry. Here, we performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association (GWA) results for adult height in 20,427 individuals of African ancestry with replication in up to 16,436 African Americans. We found two novel height loci (Xp22-rs12393627, P = 3.4×10(-12) and 2p14-rs4315565, P = 1.2×10(-8)). As a group, height associations discovered in European-ancestry samples replicate in individuals of African ancestry (P = 1.7×10(-4) for overall replication). Fine-mapping of the European height loci in African-ancestry individuals showed an enrichment of SNPs that are associated with expression of nearby genes when compared to the index European height SNPs (P<0.01). Our results highlight the utility of genetic studies in non-European populations to understand the etiology of complex human diseases and traits.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21998595 PMCID: PMC3188544 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Quantile–quantile (QQ) plot of the meta-analysis with up to 3.3 M SNPs across 9 studies (N = 20,427).
Each black circle represents an observed statistic for genotyped SNPs only (defined as the −log10 P) against the corresponding expected statistic. The grey area corresponds to the 90% confidence intervals calculated empirically using permutations. The individual studies' inflation factors, as well as the inflation factor of the meta-analysis, were corrected using genomic control. The inflation factor of the meta-analysis is λGC = 1.064.
SNPs that reached genome-wide significance (P<5×10−8) in the combined analysis.
| Discovery | Replication | Combined | ||||||||||
| SNP | CHR(POS) | Locus | Effect allele/other allele | Effect allele frequency | Beta (SE) | GC-corrected P-value | Heterogeneity P-value | I2 (%) | Beta (SE) | P-value | Beta (SE) | P-value |
| rs2589113 | 2 (55369827) |
| T/G | 0.48 | 0.043 (0.009) | 1.1×10−5 | 0.35 | 0 | 0.048 (0.014) | 4.0×10−4 | 0.044 (0.008) | 1.7×10−8 |
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| rs6440003 | 3 (142576899) |
| A/G | 0.81 | 0.064 (0.012) | 3.7×10−7 | 0.48 | 0 | 0.066 (0.017) | 1.3×10−4 | 0.065 (0.01) | 1.9×10−10 |
| rs724577 | 4 (17602508) |
| A/C | 0.31 | 0.054 (0.010) | 1.2×10−7 | 0.28 | 0 | 0.091 (0.014) | 1.9×10−10 | 0.067 (0.008) | 1.1×10−15 |
| rs994014 | 4 (82384814) |
| T/C | 0.29 | −0.052 (0.010) | 1.1×10−6 | 0.85 | 0 | −0.056 (0.015) | 1.7×10−4 | −0.054 (0.009) | 7.8×10−10 |
| rs9470004 | 6 (35449828) |
| T/C | 0.17 | −0.078 (0.012) | 6×10−10 | 0.20 | 9.9 | −0.102 (0.035) | 0.0033 | −0.081 (0.012) | 1.0×10−11 |
| rs7979673 | 12 (64513524) |
| T/C | 0.32 | −0.056 (0.012) | 6.7×10−6 | 0.6 | 0 | −0.062 (0.015) | 2.3×10−5 | −0.058 (0.01) | 7.3×10−10 |
| rs2351491 | 15 (87199109) |
| T/C | 0.25 | 0.062 (0.011) | 1.1×10−7 | 0.42 | 0 | 0.048 (0.017) | 0.0034 | 0.057 (0.01) | 1.5×10−9 |
| rs11658329 | 17 (59116763) |
| C/G | 0.7 | 0.049 (0.010) | 4.2×10−6 | 0.36 | 0 | 0.063 (0.015) | 2.5×10−5 | 0.053 (0.009) | 5.7×10−10 |
| rs1787200 | 18 (44841652) |
| A/G | 0.37 | 0.044 (0.010) | 1.5×10−5 | 0.92 | 0 | 0.070 (0.014) | 5.5×10−7 | 0.053 (0.008) | 1.2×10−10 |
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For loci with more than one SNP with a P<5×10−8, we list the SNP with the smallest combined P-value. Results for the 153 SNPs that were followed up by in silico replication are available in Table S2. We highlight in bold the two loci not previously implicated in the regulation of height in European-ancestry populations. Effect size (beta) and standard error (SE) are in Z-score units. The effect allele frequency is the average frequency across all African-American discovery studies. The heterogeneity P-value is based on Cochran Q heterogeneity test. I 2 is a measure of heterogeneity and represents the proportion of inconsistency in individual studies that cannot be explained by chance.
Figure 2SNPs are plotted using LocusZoom [ by position on the chromosome against association with adult height (−log10 P).
The SNP name shown on the plot was the most significant SNP after the discovery meta-analysis. Estimated recombination rates (from HapMap) are plotted in cyan to reflect the local LD structure. The SNPs surrounding the most significant SNP are color coded to reflect their LD with this SNP (taken from pairwise r 2 values from the ARIC African Americans Affymetrix6.0 dataset for rs1239627 (A) and from the HapMap YRI data for rs4315565 (B)). The size of the points on the plots is proportional to the number of individuals with available genotype for any given SNP. Genes, the position of exons and the direction of transcription from the UCSC genome browser are noted. Hashmarks represent SNP positions available in the meta-analysis.
Stratified analysis of the association between adult height and rs4315565 based on ancestry at the locus.
| Ancestry | N | Beta (SE) | P-value |
| African homozygote | 11,608 | −0.067 (0.032) | 0.038 |
| African/European heterozygote | 5,971 | −0.052 (0.026) | 0.043 |
| European homozygote | 943 | −0.007 (0.056) | 0.90 |
| Combined analysis | 18,522 | −0.051 (0.019) | 0.0079 |
The effect size (beta) and standard error (SE) are in Z-score units. The direction of the effect is given for the A-allele at rs4315565. Results are from a meta-analysis of the results in ARIC, CARDIA, CFS, JHS, MESA, AABC, and AAPC. Because of its small sample size, we could not analyze height in the CFS participants homozygous for the European chromosome.
Fine-mapping results for SNPs associated with height in individuals of European descent [3].
| Association results in the African-American height meta-analysis for the SNPs associated with height in European-ancestry populations | Fine-mapping results in the African-American height meta-analysis of the height association signals in European-ancestry populations | ||||||||||
| European height SNP | Chr (BP) | Effect allele/Other allele | Beta (SE) | GC-corrected P-value | Annotation | Best African-American SNP | Chr (BP) | Effect allele/Other allele | Beta (SE) | GC-corrected P-vlaue | Annotation |
| rs9428104 | 1 (118657110) | A/G | −0.0187 (0.0102) | 0.076 |
| rs7536458 | 1 (118666125) | G/T | 0.0465 (0.0121) | 9.6×10−5 |
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| rs3791675 | 2 (55964813) | T/C | −0.0312 (0.0221) | 0.17 |
| rs1346789 | 2 (55945556) | A/G | 0.0765 (0.0192) | 5.6×10−5 |
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| rs12470505 | 2 (219616613) | T/G | 0.0232 (0.0096) | 0.019 |
| rs4453686 | 2 (219604794) | C/G | 0.0395 (0.0094) | 2.7×10−5 |
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| rs9835332 | 3 (56642722) | C/G | −0.0401 (0.0126) | 0.0021 |
| rs7637449 | 3 (56603071) | A/G | 0.0597 (0.0128) | 3.1×10−7 |
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| rs724016 | 3 (142588260) | A/G | −0.0485 (0.0107) | 1.1×10−5 |
| rs2871960 | 3 (142604504) | A/C | −0.0655 (0.0123) | 1.3×10−7 |
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| rs6449353 | 4 (17642586) | T/C | 0.0312 (0.01) | 0.0025 |
| rs7663818 | 4 (17545541) | C/T | −0.0489 (0.0095) | 2.9×10−7 |
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| rs17081935 | 4 (57518233) | T/C | 0.0021 (0.0142) | 0.89 |
| rs17087335 | 4 (57533340) | G/T | 0.0447 (0.0117) | 0.00011 |
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| rs788867 | 4 (82369030) | T/G | −0.029 (0.0158) | 0.076 |
| rs1662840 | 4 (82375433) | A/G | 0.0513 (0.0102) | 5.6×10−7 |
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| rs6470764 | 8 (130794847) | T/C | −0.0392 (0.0111) | 0.00061 |
| rs4733724 | 8 (130792910) | A/G | 0.0442 (0.0113) | 7.6×10−5 |
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| rs12680655 | 8 (135706519) | C/G | 0.0212 (0.0095) | 0.031 |
| rs2277138 | 8 (135691822) | A/G | 0.0458 (0.0121) | 0.00012 |
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| rs8181166 | 9 (88306448) | C/G | 0.0199 (0.0128) | 0.13 |
| rs405761 | 9 (88274946) | C/T | 0.0372 (0.01) | 0.00016 |
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| rs1468758 | 9 (112846903) | T/C | −0.0208 (0.0135) | 0.14 |
| rs10817133 | 9 (112831795) | A/G | 0.0463(0.0129) | 0.00025 |
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| rs2145998 | 10 (80791702) | A/T | −0.0339 (0.0094) | 0.00048 |
| rs941873 | 10 (80809468) | C/T | −0.0541 (0.0103) | 1.9×10−7 |
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| rs634552 | 11 (74959700) | T/G | 0.0159 (0.0099) | 0.12 |
| rs606452 | 11 (74953826) | A/C | 0.0425 (0.01) | 1.8×10−5 |
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| rs1351394 | 12 (64638093) | T/C | 0.0392 (0.0093) | 4.7×10−5 |
| rs7968682 | 12 (64658147) | G/T | −0.0426 (0.0093) | 4.7×10−6 |
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| rs862034 | 14 (74060499) | A/G | −0.0317 (0.0121) | 0.011 |
| rs862057 | 14 (74048618) | A/G | 0.04 (0.0095) | 2.3×10−5 |
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| rs4821083 | 22 (31386341) | T/C | 0.04 (0.0094) | 3.7×10−5 |
| rs3788478 | 22 (31387746) | A/G | 0.0414 (0.0094) | 1.0×10−5 |
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In the left-handed side of the table, we present the association results in the African-American height meta-analysis for SNPs associated with height in European-ancestry individuals. In the right-handed side of the table, we present results from our fine-mapping experiment using data from our African-American height meta-analysis. Only SNPs with P<3×10−4 (Bonferroni correction threshold; α = 0.05/161 SNPs) are presented here; the complete list of 161 SNPs (19 of the 180 height SNPs from the GIANT Consortium were not available for fine-mapping) is in Table S3. For intergenic SNPs, we provide the closest gene and the physical distance between them.
Figure 3Height association results.
In Europeans from the GIANT Consortium (A) [3] and in individuals of African ancestry (B) (this study) at the LCORL locus on chromosome 4. The GIANT Consortium originally reported SNP rs6449353, whereas rs7663818 was fine-mapped in the African height meta-analysis. For each panel, the light blue box corresponds to the chromosomal interval flanked by the leftmost and rightmost SNPs with a r 2≥0.8 with rs7663818 in HapMap CEU (A) and YRI (B) participants: these intervals are 250 kb and 80 kb wide in CEU and YRI, respectively.