| Literature DB >> 33568662 |
Hassan S Dashti1,2,3, Iyas Daghlas1,2, Jacqueline M Lane1,2,3, Yunru Huang4, Miriam S Udler1,2,5,6, Heming Wang2,7, Hanna M Ollila1,2,8,9, Samuel E Jones8,10, Jaegil Kim11, Andrew R Wood10, Michael N Weedon10, Stella Aslibekyan4, Marta Garaulet12,13,14, Richa Saxena15,16,17.
Abstract
Daytime napping is a common, heritable behavior, but its genetic basis and causal relationship with cardiometabolic health remain unclear. Here, we perform a genome-wide association study of self-reported daytime napping in the UK Biobank (n = 452,633) and identify 123 loci of which 61 replicate in the 23andMe research cohort (n = 541,333). Findings include missense variants in established drug targets for sleep disorders (HCRTR1, HCRTR2), genes with roles in arousal (TRPC6, PNOC), and genes suggesting an obesity-hypersomnolence pathway (PNOC, PATJ). Association signals are concordant with accelerometer-measured daytime inactivity duration and 33 loci colocalize with loci for other sleep phenotypes. Cluster analysis identifies three distinct clusters of nap-promoting mechanisms with heterogeneous associations with cardiometabolic outcomes. Mendelian randomization shows potential causal links between more frequent daytime napping and higher blood pressure and waist circumference.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33568662 PMCID: PMC7876146 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20585-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919