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GWAS Study

A study of Kibbutzim in Israel reveals risk factors for cardiometabolic traits and subtle population structure.

Granot-Hershkovitz E, Karasik D, Friedlander Y et al.

30108283 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2521 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GE
Granot-Hershkovitz E
KD
Karasik D
FY
Friedlander Y
RL
Rodriguez-Murillo L
DR
Dorajoo R
LJ
Liu J
SA
Sewda A
PI
Peter I
CS
Carmi S
HH
Hochner H
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Genetic studies in isolated populations often increase power for identifying loci associated with complex diseases and traits. We present here the Kibbutzim Family Study (KFS), aimed at investigating the genetic basis of cardiometabolic traits in extended Israeli families characterized by long-term social stability and a homogeneous environment. Extensive information on cardiometabolic traits, as well as genome-wide genotypes, were collected on 901 individuals. We observed that most KFS participants were of Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) genetic origin, confirmed a recent severe bottleneck in the AJ recent history, and detected a subtle within-AJ population structure. Focusing on genetic variants relatively common in the KFS but very rare in Europeans, we observed that AJ-enriched variants appear in cancer-related pathways more than expected by chance. We conducted an association study of the AJ-enriched variants against 16 cardiometabolic traits, and found seven loci (24 variants) to be significantly associated. The strongest association, which we also replicated in an independent study, was between a variant upstream of MSRA (frequency ≈1% in the KFS and nearly absent in Europeans) and weight (P = 3.6∙10-8). In conclusion, the KFS is a valuable resource for the study of the population genetics of Israel as well as the genetics of cardiometabolic traits.

733 Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry individuals (founder/population isolate), 168 Sephardi Jewish, North African Jewish, Middle Eastern, Caucasian and Yemenite Jewish individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2521
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
1,620 individuals
Replication Participants
Other
Ancestry
Israel
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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