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GWAS Study

Whole-Genome Sequencing Analysis of Human Metabolome in Multi-Ethnic Populations.

Feofanova EV, Brown MR, Alkis T et al.

37253714 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
29825 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

FE
Feofanova EV
BM
Brown MR
AT
Alkis T
MA
Manuel AM
LX
Li X
TU
Tahir UA
LZ
Li Z
MK
Mendez KM
KR
Kelly RS
QQ
Qi Q
CH
Chen H
LM
Larson MG
LR
Lemaitre RN
MA
Morrison AC
GC
Grieser C
WK
Wong KE
GR
Gerszten RE
ZZ
Zhao Z
LJ
Lasky-Su J
YB
Yu B
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Circulating metabolite levels may reflect the state of the human organism in health and disease, however, the genetic architecture of metabolites is not fully understood. We have performed a whole-genome sequencing association analysis of both common and rare variants in up to 11,840 multi-ethnic participants from five studies with up to 1666 circulating metabolites. We have discovered 1985 novel variant-metabolite associations, and validated 761 locus-metabolite associations reported previously. Seventy-nine novel variant-metabolite associations have been replicated, including three genetic loci located on the X chromosome that have demonstrated its involvement in metabolic regulation. Gene-based analysis have provided further support for seven metabolite-replicated loci pairs and their biologically plausible genes. Among those novel replicated variant-metabolite pairs, follow-up analyses have revealed that 26 metabolites have colocalized with 21 tissues, seven metabolite-disease outcome associations have been putatively causal, and 7 metabolites might be regulated by plasma protein levels. Our results have depicted the genetic contribution to circulating metabolite levels, providing additional insights into understanding human disease.

10,006 European, Hispanic or African American individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

29825
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
up to 2,466 African American individuals, up to 15,619 European ancestry individuals, 1,734 Hispanic ancestry children
Replication Participants
African American or Afro-Caribbean, European, Hispanic or Latin American, European, Hispanic or Latin American, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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