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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association meta-analyses identified 1q43 and 2q32.2 for hip Ward's triangle areal bone mineral density.

Pei YF, Hu WZ, Hai R et al.

27397699 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
7175 Participants
148 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PY
Pei YF
HW
Hu WZ
HR
Hai R
WX
Wang XY
RS
Ran S
LY
Lin Y
SH
Shen H
TQ
Tian Q
LS
Lei SF
ZY
Zhang YH
PC
Papasian CJ
DH
Deng HW
ZL
Zhang L
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Aiming to identify genomic variants associated with osteoporosis, we performed a genome-wide association meta-analysis of bone mineral density (BMD) at Ward's triangle of the hip in 7175 subjects from 6 samples. We performed in silico replications with femoral neck, trochanter, and inter-trochanter BMDs in 6912 subjects from the Framingham heart study (FHS), and with forearm, femoral neck and lumbar spine BMDs in 32965 subjects from the GEFOS summary results. Combining the evidence from all samples, we identified 2 novel loci for areal BMD: 1q43 (rs1414660, discovery p=1.20×10(-8), FHS p=0.05 for trochanter BMD; rs9287237, discovery p=3.55×10(-7), FHS p=9.20×10(-3) for trochanter BMD, GEFOS p=0.02 for forearm BMD, nearest gene FMN2) and 2q32.2 (rs56346965, discovery p=7.48×10(-7), FHS p=0.10 for inter-trochanter BMD, GEFOS p=0.02 for spine BMD, nearest gene NAB1). The two lead SNPs rs1414660 and rs56346965 are eQTL sites for the genes GREM2 and NAB1 respectively. Functional annotation of GREM2 and NAB1 illustrated their involvement in BMP signaling pathway and in bone development. We also replicated three previously reported loci: 5q14.3 (rs10037512, discovery p=3.09×10(-6), FHS p=8.50×10(-3), GEFOS p=1.23×10(-24) for femoral neck BMD, nearest gene MEF2C), 6q25.1 (rs3020340, discovery p=1.64×10(-6), GEFOS p=1.69×10(-3) for SPN-BMD, nearest gene ESR1) and 7q21.3 (rs13310130, discovery p=8.79×10(-7), GEFOS p=2.61×10(-7) for spine BMD, nearest gene SHFM1). Our findings provide additional insights that further enhance our understanding of bone development, osteoporosis, and fracture pathogenesis.

4,305 European ancestry individuals,1,579 Chinese Han ancestry individuals, 845 African-American individuals, 446 Hispanic individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

7175
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Hispanic or Latin American, African American or Afro-Caribbean, East Asian, European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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