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GWAS Study

IgA measurements in over 12 000 Swedish twins reveal sex differential heritability and regulatory locus near CD30L.

Viktorin A, Frankowiack M, Padyukov L et al.

24676358 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
12402 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

VA
Viktorin A
FM
Frankowiack M
PL
Padyukov L
CZ
Chang Z
ME
Melén E
SA
Sääf A
KI
Kull I
KL
Klareskog L
HL
Hammarström L
MP
Magnusson PK
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

In a broad attempt to improve the understanding of the genetic regulation of serum IgA levels, the heritability was estimated in over 12 000 Swedish twins, and a genome-wide association study was conducted in a subsample of 9617. Using the classical twin model the heritability was found to be significantly larger among females (61%) compared with males (21%), while contribution from shared environment (20%) was only seen for males. By modeling the genetic relationship matrix with IgA levels, we estimate that a substantial proportion (31%) of variance in IgA levels can ultimately be explained by the investigated SNPs. The genome-wide association study revealed significant association to two loci: (i) rs6928791 located on chromosome 6, 22 kb upstream of the gene SAM and SH3 domain containing 1 (SASH1) and (ii) rs13300483 on chromosome 9, situated 12 kb downstream the CD30 ligand (CD30L) encoding gene. The association to rs13300483 was replicated in two additional independent Swedish materials. The heritability of IgA levels is moderate and can partly be attributable to common variation in the CD30L locus.

9,617 European ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

12402
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
2,785 European ancestry individuals
Replication Participants
European
Ancestry
Sweden
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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