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Ancestral diversity improves discovery and fine-mapping of genetic loci for anthropometric traits-The Hispanic/Latino Anthropometry Consortium.

Authors :
Fernández-Rhodes L
Graff M
Buchanan VL
Justice AE
Highland HM
Guo X
Zhu W
Chen HH
Young KL
Adhikari K
Palmer ND
Below JE
Bradfield J
Pereira AC
Glover L
Kim D
Lilly AG
Shrestha P
Thomas AG
Zhang X
Chen M
Chiang CWK
Pulit S
Horimoto A
Krieger JE
Guindo-Martínez M
Preuss M
Schumann C
Smit RAJ
Torres-Mejía G
Acuña-Alonzo V
Bedoya G
Bortolini MC
Canizales-Quinteros S
Gallo C
González-José R
Poletti G
Rothhammer F
Hakonarson H
Igo R
Adler SG
Iyengar SK
Nicholas SB
Gogarten SM
Isasi CR
Papnicolaou G
Stilp AM
Qi Q
Kho M
Smith JA
Langefeld CD
Wagenknecht L
Mckean-Cowdin R
Gao XR
Nousome D
Conti DV
Feng Y
Allison MA
Arzumanyan Z
Buchanan TA
Ida Chen YD
Genter PM
Goodarzi MO
Hai Y
Hsueh W
Ipp E
Kandeel FR
Lam K
Li X
Nadler JL
Raffel LJ
Roll K
Sandow K
Tan J
Taylor KD
Xiang AH
Yao J
Audirac-Chalifour A
de Jesus Peralta Romero J
Hartwig F
Horta B
Blangero J
Curran JE
Duggirala R
Lehman DE
Puppala S
Fejerman L
John EM
Aguilar-Salinas C
Burtt NP
Florez JC
García-Ortíz H
González-Villalpando C
Mercader J
Orozco L
Tusié-Luna T
Blanco E
Gahagan S
Cox NJ
Hanis C
Butte NF
Cole SA
Comuzzie AG
Voruganti VS
Rohde R
Wang Y
Sofer T
Ziv E
Grant SFA
Ruiz-Linares A
Rotter JI
Haiman CA
Parra EJ
Cruz M
Loos RJF
North KE
Source :
HGG advances [HGG Adv] 2022 Mar 11; Vol. 3 (2), pp. 100099. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Mar 11 (Print Publication: 2022).
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Hispanic/Latinos have been underrepresented in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for anthropometric traits despite their notable anthropometric variability, ancestry proportions, and high burden of growth stunting and overweight/obesity. To address this knowledge gap, we analyzed densely imputed genetic data in a sample of Hispanic/Latino adults to identify and fine-map genetic variants associated with body mass index (BMI), height, and BMI-adjusted waist-to-hip ratio (WHRadjBMI). We conducted a GWAS of 18 studies/consortia as part of the Hispanic/Latino Anthropometry (HISLA) Consortium (stage 1, n = 59,771) and generalized our findings in 9 additional studies (stage 2, n = 10,538). We conducted a trans-ancestral GWAS with summary statistics from HISLA stage 1 and existing consortia of European and African ancestries. In our HISLA stage 1 + 2 analyses, we discovered one BMI locus, as well as two BMI signals and another height signal each within established anthropometric loci. In our trans-ancestral meta-analysis, we discovered three BMI loci, one height locus, and one WHRadjBMI locus. We also identified 3 secondary signals for BMI, 28 for height, and 2 for WHRadjBMI in established loci. We show that 336 known BMI, 1,177 known height, and 143 known WHRadjBMI (combined) SNPs demonstrated suggestive transferability (nominal significance and effect estimate directional consistency) in Hispanic/Latino adults. Of these, 36 BMI, 124 height, and 11 WHRadjBMI SNPs were significant after trait-specific Bonferroni correction. Trans-ancestral meta-analysis of the three ancestries showed a small-to-moderate impact of uncorrected population stratification on the resulting effect size estimates. Our findings demonstrate that future studies may also benefit from leveraging diverse ancestries and differences in linkage disequilibrium patterns to discover novel loci and additional signals with less residual population stratification.<br />Competing Interests: S.M.G. and A.M.S. receive funding from Seven Bridges Genomics to develop tools for the NHLBI BioData Catalyst consortium. All others authors declare no competing interests.<br /> (© 2022 The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2666-2477
Volume :
3
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
HGG advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35399580
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2022.100099