| Literature DB >> 25096241 |
Margaux F Keller1, Alexander P Reiner2, Yukinori Okada3, Frank J A van Rooij4, Andrew D Johnson5, Ming-Huei Chen6, Albert V Smith7, Andrew P Morris8, Toshiko Tanaka9, Luigi Ferrucci9, Alan B Zonderman10, Guillaume Lettre11, Tamara Harris12, Melissa Garcia12, Stefania Bandinelli13, Rehan Qayyum14, Lisa R Yanek14, Diane M Becker14, Lewis C Becker15, Charles Kooperberg16, Brendan Keating17, Jared Reis18, Hua Tang19, Eric Boerwinkle20, Yoichiro Kamatani21, Koichi Matsuda22, Naoyuki Kamatani21, Yusuke Nakamura23, Michiaki Kubo24, Simin Liu25, Abbas Dehghan4, Janine F Felix4, Albert Hofman4, André G Uitterlinden26, Cornelia M van Duijn4, Oscar H Franco27, Dan L Longo28, Andrew B Singleton29, Bruce M Psaty30, Michelle K Evans31, L Adrienne Cupples32, Jerome I Rotter33, Christopher J O'Donnell5, Atsushi Takahashi21, James G Wilson34, Santhi K Ganesh35, Mike A Nalls36.
Abstract
White blood cell (WBC) count is a common clinical measure used as a predictor of certain aspects of human health, including immunity and infection status. WBC count is also a complex trait that varies among individuals and ancestry groups. Differences in linkage disequilibrium structure and heterogeneity in allelic effects are expected to play a role in the associations observed between populations. Prior genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analyses have identified genomic loci associated with WBC and its subtypes, but much of the heritability of these phenotypes remains unexplained. Using GWAS summary statistics for over 50 000 individuals from three diverse populations (Japanese, African-American and European ancestry), a Bayesian model methodology was employed to account for heterogeneity between ancestry groups. This approach was used to perform a trans-ethnic meta-analysis of total WBC, neutrophil and monocyte counts. Ten previously known associations were replicated and six new loci were identified, including several regions harboring genes related to inflammation and immune cell function. Ninety-five percent credible interval regions were calculated to narrow the association signals and fine-map the putatively causal variants within loci. Finally, a conditional analysis was performed on the most significant SNPs identified by the trans-ethnic meta-analysis (MA), and nine secondary signals within loci previously associated with WBC or its subtypes were identified. This work illustrates the potential of trans-ethnic analysis and ascribes a critical role to multi-ethnic cohorts and consortia in exploring complex phenotypes with respect to variants that lie outside the European-biased GWAS pool. Published by Oxford University Press 2014. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in the public domain in the US.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25096241 PMCID: PMC4245044 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150