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GWAS Study

ExomeChip-based rare variant association study in restless legs syndrome.

Tilch E, Schormair B, Zhao C et al.

35489115 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
9012 Participants
90 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

TE
Tilch E
SB
Schormair B
ZC
Zhao C
HB
Högl B
SA
Stefani A
BK
Berger K
TC
Trenkwalder C
BC
Bachmann CG
HM
Hornyak M
FI
Fietze I
MM
Müller-Nurasyid M
PA
Peters A
HS
Herms S
NM
Nöthen MM
MB
Müller-Myhsok B
OK
Oexle K
WJ
Winkelmann J
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a common sleep-related movement disorder in populations of European descent and disease risk is strongly influenced by genetic factors. Common variants have been assessed extensively in several genome-wide association studies, but the contribution of rarer genetic variation has not been investigated at this scale. We therefore genotyped a case-control set of 9246 individuals for mainly rare and low frequency exonic variants using the Illumina ExomeChip. However, standard single variant and gene-level association tests were negative. This does not preclude a role of rare variants in RLS, but is likely due to the small sample size and the limited selection of rare genetic variation captured on the array. Therefore, exome or whole genome sequencing should be performed rather than increasing the sample size of ExomeChip studies in order to identify rare risk variants for RLS.

3,652 European ancestry cases, 5,360 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

9012
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Germany
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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