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GWAS Study

Genetic sharing with coronary artery disease identifies potential novel loci for bone mineral density.

Peng C, Shen J, Lin X et al.

28651948 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
140231 Participants
96 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PC
Peng C
SJ
Shen J
LX
Lin X
SK
Su KJ
GJ
Greenbaum J
ZW
Zhu W
LH
Lou HL
LF
Liu F
ZC
Zeng CP
DW
Deng WF
DH
Deng HW
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Bone mineral density (BMD) is a complex trait with high missing heritability. Numerous evidences have shown that BMD variation has a relationship with coronary artery disease (CAD). This relationship may come from a common genetic basis called pleiotropy. By leveraging the pleiotropy with CAD, we may be able to improve the detection power of genetic variants associated with BMD. Using a recently developed conditional false discovery rate (cFDR) method, we jointly analyzed summary statistics from two large independent genome wide association studies (GWAS) of lumbar spine (LS) BMD and CAD. Strong pleiotropic enrichment and 7 pleiotropic SNPs were found for the two traits. We identified 41 SNPs for LS BMD (cFDR<0.05), of which 20 were replications of previous GWASs and 21 were potential novel SNPs that were not reported before. Four genes encompassed by 9 cFDR-significant SNPs were partially validated in the gene expression assay. Further functional enrichment analysis showed that genes corresponding to the cFDR-significant LS BMD SNPs were enriched in GO terms and KEGG pathways that played crucial roles in bone metabolism (adjP<0.05). In protein-protein interaction analysis, strong interactions were found between the proteins produced by the corresponding genes. Our study demonstrated the reliability and high-efficiency of the cFDR method on the detection of trait-associated genetic variants, the present findings shed novel insights into the genetic variability of BMD as well as the shared genetic basis underlying osteoporosis and CAD.

53,236 individuals with bone mineral density measurements, 22,233 coronary artery disease cases, 64,762 controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

140231
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Chapter IV

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