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GWAS Study

A bivariate genome-wide approach to metabolic syndrome: STAMPEED consortium.

Kraja AT, Vaidya D, Pankow JS et al.

21386085 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
22161 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

KA
Kraja AT
VD
Vaidya D
PJ
Pankow JS
GM
Goodarzi MO
AT
Assimes TL
KI
Kullo IJ
SU
Sovio U
MR
Mathias RA
SY
Sun YV
FN
Franceschini N
AD
Absher D
LG
Li G
ZQ
Zhang Q
FM
Feitosa MF
GN
Glazer NL
HT
Haritunians T
HA
Hartikainen AL
KJ
Knowles JW
NK
North KE
IC
Iribarren C
KB
Kral B
YL
Yanek L
OP
O'Reilly PF
MM
McCarthy MI
JC
Jaquish C
CD
Couper DJ
CA
Chakravarti A
PB
Psaty BM
BL
Becker LC
PM
Province MA
BE
Boerwinkle E
QT
Quertermous T
PL
Palotie L
JM
Jarvelin MR
BD
Becker DM
KS
Kardia SL
RJ
Rotter JI
CY
Chen YD
BI
Borecki IB
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

OBJECTIVE The metabolic syndrome (MetS) is defined as concomitant disorders of lipid and glucose metabolism, central obesity, and high blood pressure, with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. This study tests whether common genetic variants with pleiotropic effects account for some of the correlated architecture among five metabolic phenotypes that define MetS. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Seven studies of the STAMPEED consortium, comprising 22,161 participants of European ancestry, underwent genome-wide association analyses of metabolic traits using a panel of ∼2.5 million imputed single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Phenotypes were defined by the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) criteria for MetS in pairwise combinations. Individuals exceeding the NCEP thresholds for both traits of a pair were considered affected. RESULTS Twenty-nine common variants were associated with MetS or a pair of traits. Variants in the genes LPL, CETP, APOA5 (and its cluster), GCKR (and its cluster), LIPC, TRIB1, LOC100128354/MTNR1B, ABCB11, and LOC100129150 were further tested for their association with individual qualitative and quantitative traits. None of the 16 top SNPs (one per gene) associated simultaneously with more than two individual traits. Of them 11 variants showed nominal associations with MetS per se. The effects of 16 top SNPs on the quantitative traits were relatively small, together explaining from ∼9% of the variance in triglycerides, 5.8% of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 3.6% of fasting glucose, and 1.4% of systolic blood pressure. CONCLUSIONS Qualitative and quantitative pleiotropic tests on pairs of traits indicate that a small portion of the covariation in these traits can be explained by the reported common genetic variants.

22,161 European ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

22161
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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