Ancestral diversity improves discovery and fine-mapping of genetic loci for anthropometric traits - the Hispanic/Latino Anthropometry Consortium

Lindsay Fernández-Rhodes,Mariaelisa Graff,Victoria L. Buchanan,Anne E. Justice,Heather M. Highland,Xiuqing Guo,Wanying Zhu,Hung-Hsin Chen,Kristin L. Young,Kaustubh Adhikari,Nicholette (Palmer) Allred,Jennifer E. Below,Jonathan Bradfield,Alexandre C. Pereira,LáShauntá Glover,Daeeun Kim,Adam G. Lilly,Poojan Shrestha,Alvin G. Thomas,Xinruo Zhang,Minhui Chen,Charleston W. K. Chiang,Sara Pulit,Andrea Horimoto,Jose E. Krieger,Marta Guindo-Martinez,Michael Preuss, Claudia Schumann,Roelof A.J. Smit,Gabriela Torres-Mejía,Victor Acuña-Alonzo,Gabriel Bedoya,Maria-Cátira Bortolini,Samuel Canizales-Quinteros,Carla Gallo,Rolando González-José,Giovanni Poletti,Francisco Rothhammer,Hakon Hakonarson,Robert Igo,Sharon G Adler,Sudha K. Iyengar,Susanne B. Nicholas,Stephanie M. Gogarten,Carmen R. Isasi, George Papnicolaou,Adrienne M. Stilp,Qibin Qi,Minjung Kho,Jennifer A. Smith,Carl Langfeld,Lynne Wagenknecht,Roberta Mckean-Cowdin,Xiaoyi Raymond Gao,Darryl Nousome,David V. Conti,Ye Feng,Matthew A. Allison,Zorayr Arzumanyan,Thomas A. Buchanan,Yii-Der Ida Chen, Pauline M. Genter,Mark O. Goodarzi,Yang Hai,Willa Hsueh,Eli Ipp,Fouad R. Kandeel, Kelvin Lam,Xiaohui Li,Jerry L. Nadler,Leslie J. Raffel, Kaye Roll,Kevin Sandow,Jingyi Tan,Kent D. Taylor,Anny H. Xiang,Jie Yao, Astride Audirac-Chalifour, Jose de Jesus Peralta Romero,Fernando Hartwig,Bernando Horta,John Blangero,Joanne E. Curran,Ravindranath Duggirala,Donna E. Lehman,Sobha Puppala,Laura Fejerman,Esther John,Carlos Aguilar-Salinas,Noël P. Burtt,Jose C. Florez,Humberto García-Ortíz,Clicerio González-Villalpando,Josep Mercader,Lorena Orozco,Teresa Tusié,Estela Blanco,Sheila Gahagan,Nancy J. Cox,Craig Hanis,Nancy F. Butte,Shelley A. Cole,Anthony G. Commuzzie, V. Saroja Voruganti,Rebecca Rohde,Yujie Wang,Tamar Sofer,Elad Ziv,Struan F.A. Grant, Andres Ruiz-Linares,Jerome I. Rotter,Christopher A. Haiman,Esteban J. Parra,Miguel Cruz,Ruth J.F. Loos,Kari E. North

crossref(2021)

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摘要
Hispanic/Latinos have been underrepresented in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for anthropometric traits despite notable anthropometric variability with ancestry proportions, and a high burden of growth stunting and overweight/obesity in Hispanic/Latino populations. This address this knowledge gap, we analyzed densely-imputed genetic data in a sample of Hispanic/Latino adults, to identify and fine-map common genetic variants associated with body mass index (BMI), height, and BMI-adjusted waist-to-hip ratio (WHRadjBMI). We conducted a GWAS of 18 studies/consortia as part of the Hispanic/Latino Anthropometry (HISLA) Consortium (Stage 1, n=59,769) and validated our findings in 9 additional studies (HISLA Stage 2, n=9,336). We conducted a trans-ethnic GWAS with summary statistics from HISLA Stage 1 and existing consortia of European and African ancestries. In our HISLA Stage 1+2 analyses, we discovered one novel BMI locus, as well two novel BMI signals and another novel height signal, each within established anthropometric loci. In our trans-ethnic meta- analysis, we identified three additional novel BMI loci, one novel height locus, and one novel WHRadjBMI locus. We also identified three secondary signals for BMI, 28 for height, and two for WHRadjBMI. We replicated >60 established anthropometric loci in Hispanic/Latino populations at genome-wide significance—representing up to 30% of previously-reported index SNP anthropometric associations. Trans-ethnic meta-analysis of the three ancestries showed a small-to-moderate impact of uncorrected population stratification on the resulting effect size estimates. Our novel findings demonstrate that future studies may also benefit from leveraging differences in linkage disequilibrium patterns to discover novel loci and additional signals with less residual population stratification.
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