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GWAS Study

Common variants in the GDF5-UQCC region are associated with variation in human height.

Sanna S, Jackson AU, Nagaraja R et al.

18193045 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
34213 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SS
Sanna S
JA
Jackson AU
NR
Nagaraja R
WC
Willer CJ
CW
Chen WM
BL
Bonnycastle LL
SH
Shen H
TN
Timpson N
LG
Lettre G
UG
Usala G
CP
Chines PS
SH
Stringham HM
SL
Scott LJ
DM
Dei M
LS
Lai S
AG
Albai G
CL
Crisponi L
NS
Naitza S
DK
Doheny KF
PE
Pugh EW
BY
Ben-Shlomo Y
ES
Ebrahim S
LD
Lawlor DA
BR
Bergman RN
WR
Watanabe RM
UM
Uda M
TJ
Tuomilehto J
CJ
Coresh J
HJ
Hirschhorn JN
SA
Shuldiner AR
SD
Schlessinger D
CF
Collins FS
DS
Davey Smith G
BE
Boerwinkle E
CA
Cao A
BM
Boehnke M
AG
Abecasis GR
MK
Mohlke KL
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Identifying genetic variants that influence human height will advance our understanding of skeletal growth and development. Several rare genetic variants have been convincingly and reproducibly associated with height in mendelian syndromes, and common variants in the transcription factor gene HMGA2 are associated with variation in height in the general population. Here we report genome-wide association analyses, using genotyped and imputed markers, of 6,669 individuals from Finland and Sardinia, and follow-up analyses in an additional 28,801 individuals. We show that common variants in the osteoarthritis-associated locus GDF5-UQCC contribute to variation in height with an estimated additive effect of 0.44 cm (overall P < 10(-15)). Our results indicate that there may be a link between the genetic basis of height and osteoarthritis, potentially mediated through alterations in bone growth and development.

1,084 European ancestry cases, 1,287 European ancestry controls, 4,298 European individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

34213
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
23,684 European ancestry individuals, 3,860 African American individuals
Replication Participants
European, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
Finland, U.S., Italy
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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