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Genome-wide Association Study of Non-syndromic Orofacial Clefts in a Multiethnic Sample of Families and Controls Identifies Novel Regions

Authors :
George L. Wehby
Carmen J. Buxó
Seth M. Weinberg
John R. Shaffer
Jeffrey C. Murray
Jacqueline T. Hecht
Luz Consuelo Valencia-Ramirez
Claudia P. Restrepo Muñeton
Carmencita Padilla
Kaare Christensen
Fernando A. Poletta
Wasiu Lanre Adeyemo
Alexandre R. Vieira
Eleanor Feingold
Iêda M. Orioli
Azeez Butali
Elizabeth J. Leslie
Frederic W.-B. Deleyiannis
Lina Moreno-Uribe
Nandita Mukhopadhyay
Mary L. Marazita
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Orofacial clefts (OFCs) are among the most prevalent craniofacial birth defects worldwide and create a significant public health burden. The majority of OFCs are non-syndromic and vary in prevalence by ethnicity. Africans have the lowest prevalence of OFCs (∼ 1/2,500), Asians have the highest prevalence (∼1/500), European and Latin Americans lie somewhere in the middle (∼1/800 and 1/900 respectively). Thus, ethnicity appears to be a major determinant of the risk of developing OFC. The Pittsburgh Orofacial Clefts Multiethnic study was designed to explore this ethnic variance, comprising a large number of families and individuals (∼12,000 individuals) from multiple populations worldwide: US and Europe, Asians, mixed Native American/Caucasians, and Africans. In this current study, we analyzed 2,915 OFC cases, 6,044 unaffected individuals related to the OFC cases, and 2,685 controls with no personal or family history of OFC. Participants were grouped by their ancestry into African, Asian, European, and Central and South American subsets, and genome-wide association run on the combined sample as well as the four ancestry-based groups. We observed 22 associations to cleft lip with or without cleft palate at 18 distinct loci with p-values < 1e-06, including 10 with genome-wide significance (< 5e-08), in the combined sample and within ancestry groups. Three loci - 2p12 (rs62164740, p=6.27e-07), 10q22.2 (rs150952246, p=3.14e-07), and 10q24.32 (rs118107597, p=8.21e-07) are novel. Nine were in or near known OFC loci - PAX7, IRF6, FAM49A, DCAF4L2, 8q24.21, NTN1, WNT3-WNT9B, TANC2, and RHPN2. The majority of the associations were observed only in the combined sample, European, and Central and South American groups. We investigated whether the observed differences in association strength were a) purely due to sample sizes, b) due to systematic allele frequency difference at the population level, or (c) due to the fact certain OFC-causing variants confer different amounts of risk depending on ancestral origin, by comparing effect sizes to observed allele frequencies of the effect allele in our ancestry-based groups. While some of the associations differ due to systematic differences in allele frequencies between groups, others show variation in effect size despite similar frequencies across ancestry groups.

Details

ISSN :
62164740
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2e6b580849dca44b07b5691bb06fc0cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.27.20220574