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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study of age at menarche in African-American women.

Demerath EW, Liu CT, Franceschini N et al.

23599027 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
108741 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

DE
Demerath EW
LC
Liu CT
FN
Franceschini N
CG
Chen G
PJ
Palmer JR
SE
Smith EN
CC
Chen CT
AC
Ambrosone CB
AA
Arnold AM
BE
Bandera EV
BG
Berenson GS
BL
Bernstein L
BA
Britton A
CA
Cappola AR
CC
Carlson CS
CS
Chanock SJ
CW
Chen W
CZ
Chen Z
DS
Deming SL
EC
Elks CE
EM
Evans MK
GZ
Gajdos Z
HB
Henderson BE
HJ
Hu JJ
IS
Ingles S
JE
John EM
KK
Kerr KF
KL
Kolonel LN
LM
Le Marchand L
LX
Lu X
MR
Millikan RC
MS
Musani SK
NN
Nock NL
NK
North K
NS
Nyante S
PM
Press MF
RJ
Rodriquez-Gil JL
RE
Ruiz-Narvaez EA
SN
Schork NJ
SS
Srinivasan SR
WN
Woods NF
ZW
Zheng W
ZR
Ziegler RG
ZA
Zonderman A
HG
Heiss G
GW
Gwen Windham B
WM
Wellons M
MS
Murray SS
NM
Nalls M
PT
Pastinen T
RA
Rajkovic A
HJ
Hirschhorn J
AC
Adrienne Cupples L
KC
Kooperberg C
MJ
Murabito JM
HC
Haiman CA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

African-American (AA) women have earlier menarche on average than women of European ancestry (EA), and earlier menarche is a risk factor for obesity and type 2 diabetes among other chronic diseases. Identification of common genetic variants associated with age at menarche has a potential value in pointing to the genetic pathways underlying chronic disease risk, yet comprehensive genome-wide studies of age at menarche are lacking for AA women. In this study, we tested the genome-wide association of self-reported age at menarche with common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a total of 18 089 AA women in 15 studies using an additive genetic linear regression model, adjusting for year of birth and population stratification, followed by inverse-variance weighted meta-analysis (Stage 1). Top meta-analysis results were then tested in an independent sample of 2850 women (Stage 2). First, while no SNP passed the pre-specified P < 5 × 10(-8) threshold for significance in Stage 1, suggestive associations were found for variants near FLRT2 and PIK3R1, and conditional analysis identified two independent SNPs (rs339978 and rs980000) in or near RORA, strengthening the support for this suggestive locus identified in EA women. Secondly, an investigation of SNPs in 42 previously identified menarche loci in EA women demonstrated that 25 (60%) of them contained variants significantly associated with menarche in AA women. The findings provide the first evidence of cross-ethnic generalization of menarche loci identified to date, and suggest a number of novel biological links to menarche timing in AA women.

18,089 African American individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

108741
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
2,850 African American individuals, 87,802 European ancestry inidividuals
Replication Participants
European, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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