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Rare and low-frequency coding variants alter human adult height

Authors :
Stirrups, KE
Butterworth, AS
Chowdhury, R
Danesh, J
Di Angelantonio, E
Howson, JMM
Surendran, P
Young, R
Dennis, JG
Easton, DF
Thompson, DJ
Dunning, AM
Pirie, A
Tyrer, JP
Langenberg, C
Luan, J
Scott, RA
Wareham, NJ
Willems, SM
Zhao, JH
Sivapalaratnam, S
Johnson, Kathleen [0000-0002-6823-3252]
Butterworth, Adam [0000-0002-6915-9015]
Chowdhury, Rajiv [0000-0003-4881-5690]
Danesh, John [0000-0003-1158-6791]
Di Angelantonio, Emanuele [0000-0001-8776-6719]
Howson, Joanna [0000-0001-7618-0050]
Surendran, Praveen [0000-0002-4911-6077]
Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214]
Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247]
Thompson, Deborah [0000-0003-1465-5799]
Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166]
Tyrer, Jonathan [0000-0003-3724-4757]
Langenberg, Claudia [0000-0002-5017-7344]
Luan, Jian'an [0000-0003-3137-6337]
Wareham, Nicholas [0000-0003-1422-2993]
Zhao, Jing Hua [0000-0003-4930-3582]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2017.

Abstract

Height is a highly heritable, classic polygenic trait with ~700 common associated variants identified so far through genome-wide association studies. Here, we report 83 new height-associated coding variants with lower minor allele frequencies (range of 0.1-4.8%) and effects of up to 2 cm/allele (e.g. in IHH, STC2, AR and CRISPLD2), >10 times the average effect of common variants. In functional follow-up studies, rare height-increasing variants of STC2 (+1-2 cm/allele) compromised proteolytic inhibition of PAPP-A and increased cleavage of IGFBP-4 in vitro, resulting in higher bioavailability of insulin-like growth factors. These 83 height-associated variants overlap genes mutated in monogenic growth disorders and highlight new biological candidates (e.g. ADAMTS3, IL11RA, NOX4) and pathways (e.g. proteoglycan/glycosaminoglycan synthesis) involved in growth. Our results demonstrate that sufficiently large sample sizes can uncover rare and low-frequency variants of moderate to large effect associated with polygenic human phenotypes, and that these variants implicate relevant genes and pathways.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....373f2e5b3021293fc11cce44cb0e3086
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.7271