| Literature DB >> 30290150 |
Malika Kumar Freund1, Kathryn S Burch2, Huwenbo Shi2, Nicholas Mancuso3, Gleb Kichaev2, Kristina M Garske4, David Z Pan2, Zong Miao5, Karen L Mohlke6, Markku Laakso7, Päivi Pajukanta5, Bogdan Pasaniuc8, Valerie A Arboleda9.
Abstract
Although recent studies provide evidence for a common genetic basis between complex traits and Mendelian disorders, a thorough quantification of their overlap in a phenotype-specific manner remains elusive. Here, we have quantified the overlap of genes identified through large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWASs) for 62 complex traits and diseases with genes containing mutations known to cause 20 broad categories of Mendelian disorders. We identified a significant enrichment of genes linked to phenotypically matched Mendelian disorders in GWAS gene sets; of the total 1,240 comparisons, a higher proportion of phenotypically matched or related pairs (n = 50 of 92 [54%]) than phenotypically unmatched pairs (n = 27 of 1,148 [2%]) demonstrated significant overlap, confirming a phenotype-specific enrichment pattern. Further, we observed elevated GWAS effect sizes near genes linked to phenotypically matched Mendelian disorders. Finally, we report examples of GWAS variants localized at the transcription start site or physically interacting with the promoters of genes linked to phenotypically matched Mendelian disorders. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that genes that are disrupted in Mendelian disorders are dysregulated by non-coding variants in complex traits and demonstrate how leveraging findings from related Mendelian disorders and functional genomic datasets can prioritize genes that are putatively dysregulated by local and distal non-coding GWAS variants.Entities:
Keywords: GWAS; Hi-C; Mendelian; body mass index; common disease; complex traits; monogenic; polygenic; statistical genetics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30290150 PMCID: PMC6174356 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.08.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025