A Trans-ancestral Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies Reveals Loci Associated with Childhood Obesity.

Clicks: 324
ID: 52681
2019
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality Improving Quality
0.0 /100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
Although hundreds of GWAS-implicated loci have been reported for adult obesity-related traits, less is known about the genetics specific for early-onset obesity, and with only a few studies conducted in non-European populations to date. Searching for additional genetic variants associated with childhood obesity, we performed a trans-ancestral meta-analysis of thirty studies consisting of up to 13,005 cases (≥95th percentile of BMI achieved 2-18 years old) and 15,599 controls (consistently <50th percentile of BMI) of European, African, North/South American and East Asian ancestry. Suggestive loci were taken forward for replication in a sample of 1,888 cases and 4,689 controls from seven cohorts of European and North/South American ancestry. In addition to observing eighteen previously implicated BMI or obesity loci, for both early and late onset, we uncovered one completely novel locus in this trans-ancestral analysis (nearest gene: METTL15). The variant was nominally associated in only the European subgroup analysis but had a consistent direction of effect in other ethnicities. We then utilized trans-ancestral Bayesian analysis to narrow down the location of the probable causal variant at each genome-wide significant signal. Of all the fine-mapped loci, we were able to narrow down the causative variant at four known loci to fewer than ten SNPs (FAIM2, GNPDA2, MC4R and SEC16B loci). In conclusion, an ethnically diverse setting has enabled us to both identify an additional pediatric obesity locus and further fine-map existing loci.
Reference Key
bradfield2019ahuman Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Bradfield, Jonathan P;Vogelezang, Suzanne;Felix, Janine F;Chesi, Alessandra;Helgeland, Øyvind;Horikoshi, Momoko;Karhunen, Ville;Lowry, Estelle;Cousminer, Diana L;Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S;Thiering, Elisabeth;Boh, Eileen Tai-Hui;Zafarmand, Mohammad H;Vilor-Tejedor, Natalia;Wang, Carol A;Joro, Raimo;Chen, Zhanghua;Gauderman, William J;Pitkänen, Niina;Parra, Esteban J;Fernandez-Rhodes, Lindsay;Alyass, Akram;Monnereau, Claire;Curtin, John A;Have, Christian T;McCormack, Shana E;Hollensted, Mette;Frithioff-Bøjsøe, Christine;Valladares-Salgado, Adan;Peralta-Romero, Jesus;Teo, Yik-Ying;Standl, Marie;Leinonen, Jaakko T;Holm, Jens-Christian;Peters, Triinu;Vioque, Jesus;Vrijheid, Martine;Simpson, Angela;Custovic, Adnan;Vaudel, Marc;Canouil, MickaÍl;Lindi, Virpi;Atalay, Mustafa;KähÜnen, Mika;Raitakari, Olli T;van Schaik, Barbera D C;Berkowitz, Robert I;Cole, Shelley A;Voruganti, V Saroja;Wang, Yujie;Highland, Heather M;Comuzzie, Anthony G;Butte, Nancy F;Justice, Anne E;Gahagan, Sheila;Blanco, Estela;Lehtimäki, Terho;Lakka, Timo A;Hebebrand, Johannes;Bonnefond, AmÊlie;Grarup, Niels;Froguel, Philippe;Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka;Cruz, Miguel;Kobes, Sayuko;Hanson, Robert L;Zemel, Babette S;Hinney, Anke;Teo, Koon K;Meyre, David;North, Kari E;Gilliland, Frank D;Bisgaard, Hans;Bustamante, Mariona;Bonnelykke, Klaus;Pennell, Craig E;Rivadeneira, Fernando;Uitterlinden, AndrÊ G;Baier, Leslie J;Vrijkotte, Tanja G M;Heinrich, Joachim;Sørensen, Thorkild I A;Saw, Seang-Mei;Pedersen, Oluf;Hansen, Torben;Eriksson, Johan;WidÊn, Elisabeth;McCarthy, Mark I;Njølstad, Pül R;Power, Christine;HyppÜnen, Elina;Sebert, Sylvain;Brown, Christopher D;Järvelin, Marjo-Riitta;Timpson, Nicholas J;Johansson, Stefan;Hakonarson, Hakon;Jaddoe, Vincent W V;Grant, Struan F A;, ;
Journal Human molecular genetics
Year 2019
DOI ddz161
URL
Keywords

Citations

No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org

No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.