Literature DB >> 22087292

Bivariate genome-wide association analyses of femoral neck bone geometry and appendicular lean mass.

Lu Sun1, Li-Jun Tan, Shu-Feng Lei, Xiang-Ding Chen, Xi Li, Rong Pan, Fang Yin, Quan-Wei Liu, Xiao-Feng Yan, Christopher J Papasian, Hong-Wen Deng.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Femoral neck geometric parameters (FNGPs), such as periosteal diameter (W), cross-sectional area (CSA), cortical thickness (CT), buckling ratio (BR), and section modulus (Z), are highly genetically correlated with body lean mass. However, the specific SNPs/genes shared by these phenotypes are largely unknown.
METHODS: To identify the specific SNPs/genes shared between FNGPs and appendicular lean mass (ALM), we performed an initial bivariate genome-wide association study (GWAS) by scanning ∼690,000 SNPs in 1,627 unrelated Han Chinese adults (802 males and 825 females) and a follow-up replicate study in 2,286 unrelated US Caucasians.
RESULTS: We identified 13 interesting SNPs that may be important for both FNGPs and ALM. Two SNPs, rs681900 located in the HK2 (hexokinase 2) gene and rs11859916 in the UMOD (uromodulin) gene, were bivariately associated with FNGPs and ALM (p = 7.58×10(-6) for ALM-BR and p = 2.93×10(-6) for ALM-W, respectively). The associations were then replicated in Caucasians, with corresponding p values of 0.024 for rs681900 and 0.047 for rs11859916. Meta-analyses yielded combined p values of 3.05×10(-6) and 2.31×10(-6) for rs681900 and rs11859916, respectively. Our findings are consistent with previous biological studies that implicated HK2 and UMOD in both FNGPs and ALM. Our study also identified a group of 11 contiguous SNPs, which spanned a region of ∼130 kb, were bivariately associated with FNGPs and ALM, with p values ranging from 3.06×10(-7) to 4.60×10(-6) for ALM-BR. The region contained two neighboring miRNA coding genes, MIR873 (MicroRNA873) and MIR876 (MicroRNA876).
CONCLUSION: Our study implicated HK2, UMOD, MIR873 and MIR876, as pleiotropic genes underlying variation of both FNGPs and ALM, thus suggesting their important functional roles in co-regulating both FNGPs and ALM.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22087292      PMCID: PMC3210160          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027325

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Osteoporosis is a common disease, particularly among the elderly, characterized by decreased bone strength and increased fracture risk [1], [2]. Hip fracture is the most common and serious type of osteoporotic fracture, often producing prolonged or permanent disability, or even death, for some patients [1], [3]. The musculoskeletal system, however, contains both bone and muscle, and these two tissue types are highly interdependent. Bones sustain mechanical loads and provide load points for muscles, and muscles keep bones in place and are responsible for major mechanical loading of bones [4]. Due to the morbidity, mortality, and health care costs associated with osteoporotic fractures, a variety of phenotypic characteristics have been analyzed for their associations with bone strength, and fracture risk. Bone mineral density (BMD) is considered to be an important, but not exclusive, determining factor for bone strength, and is also associated with fracture risk [5], [6]. Bone geometry, independent of BMD, is another important factor, that determines bone strength and is directly associated with osteoporotic fractures [7]. Several recent studies have reported that femoral neck geometric parameters (FNGPs) such as periosteal diameter (W), cross-sectional area (CSA), cortical thickness (CT), buckling ratio (BR), and section modulus (Z), can be used to improve the accuracy of identifying people at high risk of hip fracture [3], [8], [9], [10]. The muscular component of the musculosketal system, as defined by body lean mass, is also closely associated with human health. Low body lean mass is associated with a series of health problems, such as sarcopenia, impaired protein balance, obesity, and osteoporosis [3], [11]. Not surprisingly, body lean mass and FNGPs are closely related phenotypes. It has been demonstrated that bone geometry can serve as a useful index that represents adaptive responses of bone to altered mechanical loading [12]. Body lean mass, in turn, has been shown to contribute to variations of bone geometry at the femoral neck (FN) [13], [14], potentially due to genetic, mechanical, hormonal and nutritional factors. For example, dynamic strains provided by muscle may be an important stimulus of bone adaptation [14]. From the genetic perspective, previous bivariate quantitative genetic analyses have shown that body lean mass was significantly correlated with FNGPs, and that these phenotypic traits might share some common genetic factors [15]. Subsequently, bivariate whole genome linkage analysis reported that several genomic regions, such as 3q12 and 20q13, were linked with both FNGPs and body lean mass [16]. However, the specific SNPs/genes that are shared between these two phenotypes are largely unknown. Bivariate GWAS is a newly developed effective approach to detect pleiotropic genes for complex traits [17]. To identify the specific pleiotropic SNPs/genes that contribute to both FNGPs and body lean mass, we performed an initial bivariate GWAS in a large Chinese sample, and a follow-up replicate study in Caucasians. We utilized appendicular lean mass (ALM) as our determinant of lean mass, as several studies have suggested that ALM is a better proxy measure of body skeletal muscle mass than total body lean mass for assessing exercise capacity and predicting related diseases [18], [19], [20]. ALM is calculated as the sum of lean mass in the arms and legs.

Results

The basic characteristics of the study subjects are shown in Table 1. Generally, FNGPs and ALM in men were higher than those in women. All study parameters, except CT in men, were higher in Caucasians than in Chinese subjects.
Table 1

Basic characteristics of study subjects.

TraitsChinese sampleUS sample
Male (N = 802)Female (N = 825)Male (N = 558)Female (N = 1728)
Age (years)31.44±11.9837.44±13.7850.19±16.0351.13±13.00
W (cm)3.54±0.273.12±0.333.82±0.333.30±0.34
CSA (cm2)2.92±0.502.25±0.373.08±0.592.45±0.47
CT (cm)0.17±0.030.14±0.020.16±0.030.15±0.03
Z (cm3)1.84±0.381.26±0.292.12±0.491.45±0.36
BR10.97±2.0811.08±2.7612.29±2.5711.46±2.43
ALM (kg)23.95±3.2015.75±2.0829.89±4.8520.22±3.53

Note: all the values are means ± SD.

Note: all the values are means ± SD. Correlation analysis using our phenotypic data have shown that body lean mass was significantly correlated with W, CSA, CT and Z (Table 2), which is generally consistent with previous studies [15], [16].
Table 2

Results of bivariate GWAS for ALM and five FNGPs (p<1×10−5).

Phenotypes pairSNPChr.PositionGeneAllele1 MAF2 MAF3 Bivariate p Replication p
ALM-W rs6789283 321996951 - C/T0.0410.0341.34×10−7 0.774
(0.573**)4 rs854140 556985279 - G/A0.4620.4673.50×10−6 0.825
(0.501**)5 rs17037864 4160113841 C4orf45 A/G0.3640.3783.93×10−6 0.865
rs2062713 12113660935 - T/C0.2890.3337.33×10−6 0.592
rs681900 2 74928475 HK2 G/A 0.162 0.133 7.58×10−6 0.024
ALM-CSA rs4804662 197481408 - G/A0.2310.2114.72×10−7 0.216
(0.729**) rs10928979 2127136698 - G/A0.3710.4336.46×10−7 0.441
(0.642**) rs6789283 321996951 - C/T0.0410.0112.50×10−6 0.531
rs12098712 105601911 - T/C0.1100.1229.56×10−6 0.117
ALM-CT rs4507747 8141288307 TRAPPC9 T/C0.0130.0002.32×10−6 0.429
(0.524**) rs10928979 2127136698 - G/A0.3710.4333.74×10−6 0.766
(0.450**) rs4804662 197481408 - G/A0.2310.2113.76×10−6 0.116
ALM-Z rs6789283 321996951 - C/T0.0410.0117.46×10−8 0.656
(0.768**) rs10928979 2127136698 - G/A0.3710.4339.58×10−7 0.491
(0.679**) rs2081106 558514356 PDE4D T/A0.0760.0564.91×10−6 0.650
rs4804662 197481408 - G/A0.2310.2116.19×10−6 0.222
rs12098712 105601911 - T/A0.1100.1228.72×10−6 0.075
ALM-BR rs1368998 9 28869953 MIR873 T/G 0.115 0.111 3.06×10−7 0.961
(-0.095**) rs12005658 9 28858243 MIR876 A/G 0.116 0.111 3.96×10−7 0.976
(-0.113**) rs16913782 9 28866158 MIR876 T/C 0.116 0.111 4.66×10−7 0.970
rs969715 9 28810807 MIR876 C/T 0.117 0.122 5.49×10−7 0.943
rs11998784 9 28865332 MIR876 G/A 0.116 0.111 8.12×10−7 0.997
rs1389728 9 28807957 MIR876 C/T 0.116 0.122 9.74×10−7 0.569
rs13299777 9 28929554 MIR873 C/T 0.116 0.122 9.83×10−7 0.407
rs3849874 9 28859369 MIR876 C/G 0.116 0.111 1.13×10−6 0.968
rs16913751 9 28843125 MIR876 T/C 0.119 0.111 1.64×10−6 0.939
rs854140 556985279 - G/A0.4620.4672.10×10 6 0.773
rs10491629 9 28845155 MIR876 T/G 0.117 0.116 2.91×10−6 0.911
rs11859916 16 20258732 UMOD A/G 0.227 0.200 2.93×10−6 0.047
rs10491633 9 28933695 MIR873 T/C 0.115 0.122 4.60×10−6 0.293
rs4804662 197481408 - G/A0.2310.2118.10×10 6 0.160

Note:

Bold font: the identified 13 SNPs.

The first allele represents the minor allele of each locus.

Minor allele frequency calculated in our own Chinese subjects.

Minor allele frequency reported for Chinese in the public HapMap HCB database.

Phenotype correlation for Chinese sample. ** p≤0.01.

Phenotype correlation for US data. ** p≤0.01.

Note: Bold font: the identified 13 SNPs. The first allele represents the minor allele of each locus. Minor allele frequency calculated in our own Chinese subjects. Minor allele frequency reported for Chinese in the public HapMap HCB database. Phenotype correlation for Chinese sample. ** p≤0.01. Phenotype correlation for US data. ** p≤0.01. We identified 13 interesting SNPs that were bivariately associated with ALM and FNGPs. Among them, SNP rs681900 located in intron 1 of the hexokinase 2 gene (HK2), ranked among the top 5 SNPs for bivariate association with ALM-W (p = 7.58×10−6). Another SNP, rs11859916 of the uromodulin gene (UMOD) ranked among the top 3 loci for associations with ALM-BR (p = 2.93×10−6). We also found replicate association for these two SNPs in Caucasians, with corresponding p values of 0.024 for rs681900 and 0.047 for rs11859916 (Table 2). Meta-analyses yielded stronger associations, with pooled p values of 3.05×10−6 and 2.31×10−6 for rs681900 and rs11859916, respectively. A group of 11 contiguous SNPs spanning ∼130 kb region harboring the MIR876 (MicroRNA876) and MIR873 (MicroRNA873) genes were strongly associated with ALM-BR, with p values ranging from 3.06×10−7 to 4.60×10−6. Among them, two SNPs, rs12005658 and rs3849874, were located in the promoter region of the MIR876 gene. As shown in Figure 1, LD signals within this SNP group were very strong and all 11 SNPs were within one haplotype block.
Figure 1

Bivariate associations of 11 contiguous SNPs with ALM-BR in the region of the MIR876 and MIR873 genes.

Notes: The Y axis is the negative Log10p values. The LD between two SNPs is standardized D' (D/Dmax).

Bivariate associations of 11 contiguous SNPs with ALM-BR in the region of the MIR876 and MIR873 genes.

Notes: The Y axis is the negative Log10p values. The LD between two SNPs is standardized D' (D/Dmax). Since the five bone geometry parameters are closely related, we compared the results from the five phenotype pairs for the 13 interesting SNPs to detect common and/or specific SNPs for the five phenotype pairs. As shown in Table 3, three phenotype pairs (ALM-W, ALM-CT, and ALM-BR) generally have stronger association signals than other two (ALM-CSA and ALM-Z) for the 13 interesting SNPs. For SNP rs681900, there were consistently strong association signals across the five phenotype pairs, with p values ranging from 1.57×10−4 to 7.58×10−6, probably suggesting that this SNP has a common effect on all five phenotype pairs.
Table 3

Bivariately/univariate associations for 13 interesting SNPs.

SNPRoleBivariate p valuesunivariate p values
ALM-WALM-CSAALM-CTALM-ZALM-BRALMWCSACTZBR
rs681900 Intron17.58×10−6 1.57×10−4 5.44×10−5 9.39×10−5 3.01×10−5 0.590.060.900.610.950.46
rs11859916 Intron71.58×10−2 6.01×10−2 3.67×10−4 4.12×10−1 2.93×10−6 0.720.030.090.550.030.68
rs12005658 Promoter4.60×10−5 6.42×10−3 4.14×10−5 4.61×10−2 3.96×10−7 0.840.870.360.450.760.98
rs16913782 Upstream3.37×10−5 7.96×10−3 6.55×10−5 4.18×10−2 4.66×10−7 0.930.870.400.520.800.93
rs969715 Downstream3.06×10−5 1.97×10−2 9.41×10−5 8.58×10−2 5.49×10−7 0.820.970.640.440.890.78
rs11998784 Upstream9.41×10−5 9.25×10−3 7.37×10−5 6.61×10−2 8.12×10−7 0.961.000.370.440.820.87
rs1389728 Downstream4.16×10−5 2.31×10−2 1.61×10−4 8.96×10−2 9.74×10−7 0.800.990.630.440.870.79
rs3849874 Promoter8.96×10−5 7.99×10−3 9.57×10−5 4.95×10−2 1.13×10−6 0.890.880.390.500.790.96
rs16913751 Downstream1.20×10−4 1.07×10−2 1.42×10−4 6.53×10−2 1.64×10−6 0.930.980.550.380.810.76
rs10491629 Downstream1.37×10−4 1.04×10−2 2.43×10−4 4.82×10−2 2.91×10−6 0.910.960.570.360.850.73
rs1368998 Downstream3.18×10−5 6.29×10−3 3.33×10−5 4.82×10−2 3.06×10−7 0.940.810.280.370.640.96
rs13299777 Upstream8.76×10−5 1.51×10−3 1.91×10−5 3.27×10−2 9.83×10−7 0.650.810.930.680.700.71
rs10491633 Upstream1.95×10−4 3.21×10−3 8.28×10−5 4.42×10−2 4.60×10−6 0.580.770.790.800.600.76
As shown in Table 3, the bivariate association signals were generally stronger than the univariate association signals, suggesting that bivariate analysis has a higher power to detect shared genetic factors for related phenotype pairs [17]. For example, with SNP rs681900, the univariate associations were not significant for either ALM or W, but bivariate associations were consistently significant for all phenotypic pairs, with p values ranging from 1.57×10−4 to 7.58×10−6. To provide readers more details about the bivariate GWAS, all the SNPs with p value less than 10−4 were demonstrated in Appendix S1.

Discussion

Using the novel multivariate approach, we performed a bivariate GWAS for ALM and FNGPs, and found that 13 interesting SNPs located within or near four genes, HK2, UMOD, MIR876 and MIR873, showed strong associations with both femoral neck bone geometry and ALM. The present study represents the first effort to detect shared genetic factors for these closely related phenotypes (ALM and FNGPs). GWAS provides impressive statistical power for detecting novel genetic variants that underlie common human diseases. To date, however, most published GWAS's utilize a univariate framework to analyze different phenotypes separately. Although these univariate GWA analyses have led to the discovery of novel genes for several complex diseases, this approach often lacks sufficient power to detect pleiotropic genes that may influence multiple phenotypes. Newly developed methodologies for bivariate GWAS's have higher power for detecting pleiotropic genes than univariate approaches [17], [21]. The results shown in Table 3 clearly demonstrate the advantage of bivariate association studies for identifying pleiotropic genes. The importance of the 13 interesting SNPs is supported by both the statistical evidence provided in this manuscript, and by the known functions of the four genes at the genomic regions containing these 13 interesting SNPs. HK2 encodes the protein hexokinase 2, the predominant form of hexokinase presented in skeletal muscle. Hexokinase is responsible for phosphorylating glucose to produce glucose-6-phosphate, the first step in most glucose metabolism pathways. Hexokinase 2 is one of the key enzymes involved in regulating glucose metabolism for muscle tissue [22], [23]. Glucose metabolism, one of the most basic cellular biochemical reactions, provides energy and material for fundamental cellular activities such as protein metabolism, cell growth, and proliferation [24], [25], [26], [27]. These activities are essential for normal muscle growth, and may influence lean mass in human [28]. Glucose metabolism is also associated with bone development, as elevated glucose levels have been shown to inhibit calcium uptake and bone mineralization [29]. Moreover, bone resorption is dependent on glucose concentrations. Reduced expression of HK2 is also associated with non-insulin-dependent diabetes, which may lead to osteoporosis and losses in lean mass [30], [31]. This collective information strongly supports the conclusion that HK2 is involved in both muscle and bone metabolism. The UMOD gene encodes uromodulin, the most abundant protein in mammalian urine. Uromodulin may influence both bone and muscle by regulating renal excretion of metabolites. Uromodulin is involved in calcium metabolism, and acts as a regulator of calcium oxalate crystallization [32]. Missense mutation of UMOD in mice causes moderate increases in plasma calcium concentrations, and significant decreases in bone mineral density and bone mineral content [33]. Uromodulin may also influence lean mass through creatinine, energy, and protein metabolism, as mice with UMOD mutations have reduced body weight, including body lean mass, and significant increases in plasma creatinine and urea levels, compared with normal mice [33]. Of particular interest, a group of 11 contiguous SNPs locates within genomic regions containing two miRNA encoding genes (MIR876 and MIR873) were strongly associated with ALM-BR in Chinese. Two of the 11 SNPs, rs12005658 and rs3849874 were located in the promoter region of MIR876. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression in multicellular organisms by affecting both the stability and translation of mRNA. We used the TargetScan platform (http://www.targetscan.org release 5.1), web-based software with a low false positive rate, to identify predicted miRNA target genes. MIR876 encodes two MicroRNAs: miR-876–3p and miR-876–5p. Using TargetScan software, 93 and 148 genes were predicted to be targets for miR-876–3p and miR-876–5p, respectively. Among them, ACTN4 (actinin, alpha 4) [34], MBNL1 (muscleblind-like) [35], and SEPN1 (selenoprotein N, 1) [36] are involved in muscle metabolism, and ANKH (ankylosis, progressive homolog) [37], TAPT1 (transmembrane anterior posterior transformation 1) [38], and TRPS1 (trichorhinophalangeal syndrome I) [39] are related to bone metabolism. For MIR873, 176 target genes were identified using the TargetScan platform. Several of these genes are also involved in muscle or bone metabolism. For example, DMD (dystrophin) and BMP7 (bone morphogenetic protein 7) are associated with muscle and bone metabolism, respectively [40]. However, the exact mechanisms by which MIR876 and MIR873 are involved in co-regulating bone and muscle metabolism are unclear. Functional studies are being planned to validate our findings. The association results from our initial Chinese sample were replicated in a Caucasian population. Much of the genetic background across the two ethnic groups is similar, which indicates that mutual replication between different ethnic groups is feasible. We found consistent associations across the two ethnic groups for two SNPs (rs681900 and rs11859916), suggesting the consistent effects of these two SNPs on both Chinese and Caucasians. However, ethnic genetic heterogeneity has also been observed among different races when studying specific phenotypes or diseases [41], [42]. Our study found a group of 11 contiguous SNPs ranked at the top for bivariate association with ALM and BR in the Chinese sample, but these findings were not replicated in Caucasians. It is possible that the failure to replicate these findings in Caucasians was attributable to genetic diversity in this region between Chinese and Caucasians. In conclusion, we used a novel bivariate GWAS approach in a large Chinese sample, and a follow-up replication study in Caucasians, combined with functional evidence, to identify two genes, HK2 and UMOD, that appear to co-regulate FNGPs and ALM. Two additional MicroRNA genes (MIR873 and MIR876) were also associated with bone geometry and ALM in Chinese, but these findings were not replicated in Caucasians. These findings enhance our knowledge of genetic associations between bone geometry and ALM, and provide a rationale for subsequent functional studies of these implicated genes in the pathophysiology of diseases related to these phenotypes, such as hip fracture and sarcopenia.

Materials and Methods

Subjects and phenotypes

The study was approved by the institutional review boards of Hunan Normal University, Xian Jiao Tong University and University of Missouri-Kansas City. All study participants signed informed consent documents before they entered the project. Two independent samples were included in this study: a sample of 1,627 unrelated adult Han Chinese (802 males and 825 females) recruited from Changsha and Xi'an and their surroundings areas, and another sample of 2,286 unrelated homogeneous US Caucasians (including 558 males and 1,728 females) recruited from the Midwestern US in Kansas City, Missouri and Omaha, Nebraska. Anthropometric measures and a structured questionnaire including diet, lifestyle, medical history, family information and others were obtained for all subjects. The five FNGPs, such as W and CSA are calculated based on the BMD (g/cm2) and bone size (cm2) at the FN. Detailed calculation formulas for the five parameters have been described elsewhere [43], [44], [45]. ALM (g) was calculated as the sum of lean soft tissue (nonfat, non-bone) mass in the arms and legs. BMD and bone size at the FN and ALM were measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) with Hologic densitometers (Hologic Inc., Waltham, MA, USA) that were calibrated daily. For Chinese subjects, the coefficient of variation (CV) values of DXA measurements for BMD, bone size at the FN and ALM were 1.87%, 1.94%, and 1.0%, respectively. Similar CV values were obtained with US Caucasians.

Genotyping

Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood leukocytes using the Puregene DNA isolation kit (Gentra Systems, Minneapolis, MN, USA). All subjects were genotyped using the Human mapping SNP 6.0 assay kit (Affymetrix, Inc, Santa Clara, CA), following the standard protocol recommended by the manufacturer. For quality control (QC) of SNPs, we set the default value of greater than 0.4 as the contrast QC threshold. The final average contrast QC across the entire sample reached the high level of 2.62. In the initial stage, 909,622 SNPs were genotyped for the Chinese subjects. After excluding 17,888 SNP with allele frequencies deviating extremely from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (p<0.01) and 202,984 SNPs with minor allele frequencies (MAF) <1% (618 SNP were included by both exclusion criteria), a final total of 689,368 SNPs were retained for subsequent analyses, yielding an average marker spacing of ∼4 kb throughout the human genome.

Statistical Analyses

Although previous studies have reported that FNGPs and body lean mass are two related phenotypes [15], [16], we re-estimated their phenotype correlation used our Chinese data. The bivariate correlation analysis was performed using the statistical package SPSS version 17.0. We adopted similar statistical analyses in the initial GWAS and replicate study. Before association analyses, raw phenotypes of FNGPs and ALM were adjusted for age and sex. Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed [46] to calculate the principal components, and the ten default main eigenvectors were used as covariates to adjust raw phenotypic data for correction of population stratification. We performed bivariate GWAS to detect associations between each SNP and two phenotypes. An additive genetic model was applied to both univariate and bivariate association analyses. Based on a linear model, bivariate regression analyses were conducted using the R software package (available at http://www.r-project.org). This method is expressed as follows: for an individual i, y is a vector of a length of 2 and coding the individual's bivariate phenotype, which can be modeled as In this model: is the grand mean vector; Z = (Z1 Z2···Zn) is a vector coding for covariates, that may include other risk factors and confounding factors; β's are the corresponding effects of covariates or the SNP under test; x is the genotype score at the locus of interest for individual i, and ε is the vector of random error. We compared the likelihood of the model under the null hypothesis (SNP effects are restricted to 0), with that under the alternative hypothesis (the SNP effects are not 0), to test the alternative hypothesis. Then the likelihood ratio can convert to an F-statistic, which follows an F-distribution under the null hypothesis. The bivariate p value was calculated based on the F-statistic. To compare the results from univariate and bivariate association analyses, we also conducted univariate association with each of the tested phenotypes using Plink (version 1.07, http://pngu.mgh.harvard.edu/~purcell/plink/) in our GWAS and replicate cohorts, where genotypic association analysis was performed under a linear regression framework. Genotype was treated as the independent variable, study phenotype (such as ALM, W) as the dependent variable, and phenotype was modeled as a linear function of alternative genotypes at a certain SNP. To quantify overall evidence of association achieved in our GWAS and in the US replication cohort, we combined individual p values of the two cohorts using a Fisher's method[47] for meta-analysis. The calculation was performed using the MetaP web tool (http://people.genome.duke.edu/~dg48/metap.php). The linkage disequilibrium (LD) [standardized D′(D/Dmax)] patterns of interesting SNPs and the haplotype block map was analyzed using Haploview software (available at http://www.broad.mit.edu/mpg/haploview/). (XLS) Click here for additional data file.
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Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2015-04-22       Impact factor: 4.246

Review 3.  Genetic aspects of skeletal muscle strength and mass with relevance to sarcopenia.

Authors:  Stephen M Roth
Journal:  Bonekey Rep       Date:  2012-04-04

4.  Is GSN significant for hip BMD in female Caucasians?

Authors:  Fei-Yan Deng; Wei Zhu; Yong Zeng; Ji-Gang Zhang; Na Yu; Yao-Zhong Liu; Yong-Jun Liu; Qing Tian; Hong-Wen Deng
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2014-03-04       Impact factor: 4.398

5.  MiR-876-5p suppresses epithelial-mesenchymal transition of lung cancer by directly down-regulating bone morphogenetic protein 4.

Authors:  Liang Bao; Lei Lv; Jinping Feng; Yuyu Chen; Xinhua Wang; Shuguang Han; Hongqing Zhao
Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 1.826

6.  Suggestion of GLYAT gene underlying variation of bone size and body lean mass as revealed by a bivariate genome-wide association study.

Authors:  Yan-Fang Guo; Li-Shu Zhang; Yong-Jun Liu; Hong-Gang Hu; Jian Li; Qing Tian; Ping Yu; Feng Zhang; Tie-Lin Yang; Yan Guo; Xiang-Lei Peng; Meng Dai; Wei Chen; Hong-Wen Deng
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2012-10-30       Impact factor: 4.132

Review 7.  Bone and muscle: Interactions beyond mechanical.

Authors:  Marco Brotto; Lynda Bonewald
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2015-11       Impact factor: 4.398

Review 8.  Endocrine crosstalk between muscle and bone.

Authors:  Marco Brotto; Mark L Johnson
Journal:  Curr Osteoporos Rep       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 5.096

9.  Identification of pleiotropic loci underlying hip bone mineral density and trunk lean mass.

Authors:  Gui-Juan Feng; Xin-Tong Wei; Hong Zhang; Xiao-Lin Yang; Hui Shen; Qing Tian; Hong-Wen Deng; Lei Zhang; Yu-Fang Pei
Journal:  J Hum Genet       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 3.172

10.  Three pleiotropic loci associated with bone mineral density and lean body mass.

Authors:  Yu-Xue Zhang; Shan-Shan Zhang; Shu Ran; Hong-Wen Deng; Lei Zhang; Yu-Fang Pei; Yu Liu; Hong Zhang; Xiao-Lin Yang; Rong Hai; Hui Shen; Qing Tian
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomics       Date:  2020-09-24       Impact factor: 3.291

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