| Literature DB >> 31959922 |
Nana Matoba1,2, Masato Akiyama1,3, Kazuyoshi Ishigaki1, Masahiro Kanai1,4, Atsushi Takahashi1,5, Yukihide Momozawa6, Shiro Ikegawa7, Masashi Ikeda8, Nakao Iwata8, Makoto Hirata9, Koichi Matsuda10, Yoshinori Murakami11, Michiaki Kubo12, Yoichiro Kamatani13,14, Yukinori Okada15,16,17.
Abstract
Dietary habits are important factors in our lifestyle, and confer both susceptibility to and protection from a variety of human diseases. We performed genome-wide association studies for 13 dietary habits including consumption of alcohol (ever versus never drinkers and drinks per week), beverages (coffee, green tea and milk) and foods (yoghurt, cheese, natto, tofu, fish, small whole fish, vegetables and meat) in Japanese individuals (n = 58,610-165,084) collected by BioBank Japan, the nationwide hospital-based genome cohort. Significant associations were found in nine genetic loci (MCL1-ENSA, GCKR, AGR3-AHR, ADH1B, ALDH1B1, ALDH1A1, ALDH2, CYP1A2-CSK and ADORA2A-AS1) for 13 dietary traits (P < 3.8 × 10-9). Of these, ten associations between five loci and eight traits were new findings. Furthermore, a phenome-wide association study revealed that five of the dietary trait-associated loci have pleiotropic effects on multiple human complex diseases and clinical measurements. Our findings provide new insight into the genetics of habitual consumption.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31959922 DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0805-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Hum Behav ISSN: 2397-3374