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Large-scale GWAS identifies multiple loci for hand grip strength providing biological insights into muscular fitness.

Authors :
Willems SM
Wright DJ
Day FR
Trajanoska K
Joshi PK
Morris JA
Matteini AM
Garton FC
Grarup N
Oskolkov N
Thalamuthu A
Mangino M
Liu J
Demirkan A
Lek M
Xu L
Wang G
Oldmeadow C
Gaulton KJ
Lotta LA
Miyamoto-Mikami E
Rivas MA
White T
Loh PR
Aadahl M
Amin N
Attia JR
Austin K
Benyamin B
Brage S
Cheng YC
Cięszczyk P
Derave W
Eriksson KF
Eynon N
Linneberg A
Lucia A
Massidda M
Mitchell BD
Miyachi M
Murakami H
Padmanabhan S
Pandey A
Papadimitriou I
Rajpal DK
Sale C
Schnurr TM
Sessa F
Shrine N
Tobin MD
Varley I
Wain LV
Wray NR
Lindgren CM
MacArthur DG
Waterworth DM
McCarthy MI
Pedersen O
Khaw KT
Kiel DP
Pitsiladis Y
Fuku N
Franks PW
North KN
van Duijn CM
Mather KA
Hansen T
Hansson O
Spector T
Murabito JM
Richards JB
Rivadeneira F
Langenberg C
Perry JRB
Wareham NJ
Scott RA
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2017 Jul 12; Vol. 8, pp. 16015. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jul 12.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Hand grip strength is a widely used proxy of muscular fitness, a marker of frailty, and predictor of a range of morbidities and all-cause mortality. To investigate the genetic determinants of variation in grip strength, we perform a large-scale genetic discovery analysis in a combined sample of 195,180 individuals and identify 16 loci associated with grip strength (P<5 × 10 <superscript>-8</superscript> ) in combined analyses. A number of these loci contain genes implicated in structure and function of skeletal muscle fibres (ACTG1), neuronal maintenance and signal transduction (PEX14, TGFA, SYT1), or monogenic syndromes with involvement of psychomotor impairment (PEX14, LRPPRC and KANSL1). Mendelian randomization analyses are consistent with a causal effect of higher genetically predicted grip strength on lower fracture risk. In conclusion, our findings provide new biological insight into the mechanistic underpinnings of grip strength and the causal role of muscular strength in age-related morbidities and mortality.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29313844
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms16015