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GWAS Study

Perturbational phenotyping of human blood cells reveals genetically determined latent traits associated with subsets of common diseases.

Homilius M, Zhu W, Eddy SS et al.

38049662 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1681 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HM
Homilius M
ZW
Zhu W
ES
Eddy SS
TP
Thompson PC
ZH
Zheng H
WC
Warren CN
EC
Evans CG
KD
Kim DD
XL
Xuan LL
NC
Nsubuga C
SZ
Strecker Z
PC
Pettit CJ
CJ
Cho J
HM
Howie MN
TA
Thaler AS
WE
Wilson E
WB
Wollison B
SC
Smith C
NJ
Nascimben JB
ND
Nascimben DN
LG
Lunati GM
FH
Folks HC
CM
Cupelo M
SS
Sridaran S
RC
Rheinstein C
MT
McClennen T
GS
Goto S
TJ
Truslow JG
VS
Vandenwijngaert S
MC
MacRae CA
DR
Deo RC
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Although genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have successfully linked genetic risk loci to various disorders, identifying underlying cellular biological mechanisms remains challenging due to the complex nature of common diseases. We established a framework using human peripheral blood cells, physical, chemical and pharmacological perturbations, and flow cytometry-based functional readouts to reveal latent cellular processes and performed GWAS based on these evoked traits in up to 2,600 individuals. We identified 119 genomic loci implicating 96 genes associated with these cellular responses and discovered associations between evoked blood phenotypes and subsets of common diseases. We found a population of pro-inflammatory anti-apoptotic neutrophils prevalent in individuals with specific subsets of cardiometabolic disease. Multigenic models based on this trait predicted the risk of developing chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes patients. By expanding the phenotypic space for human genetic studies, we could identify variants associated with large effect response differences, stratify patients and efficiently characterize the underlying biology.

1,681 European ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1681
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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