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GWAS Study

Japanese GWAS identifies variants for bust-size, dysmenorrhea, and menstrual fever that are eQTLs for relevant protein-coding or long non-coding RNAs.

Hirata T, Koga K, Johnson TA et al.

29855537 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
11348 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HT
Hirata T
KK
Koga K
JT
Johnson TA
MR
Morino R
NK
Nakazono K
KS
Kamitsuji S
AM
Akita M
KM
Kawajiri M
KA
Kami A
HY
Hoshi Y
TA
Tada A
IK
Ishikawa K
HM
Hine M
KM
Kobayashi M
KN
Kurume N
FT
Fujii T
KN
Kamatani N
OY
Osuga Y
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Traits related to primary and secondary sexual characteristics greatly impact females during puberty and day-to-day adult life. Therefore, we performed a GWAS analysis of 11,348 Japanese female volunteers and 22 gynecology-related phenotypic variables, and identified significant associations for bust-size, menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) severity, and menstrual fever. Bust-size analysis identified significant association signals in CCDC170-ESR1 (rs6557160; P = 1.7 × 10-16) and KCNU1-ZNF703 (rs146992477; P = 6.2 × 10-9) and found that one-third of known European-ancestry associations were also present in Japanese. eQTL data points to CCDC170 and ZNF703 as those signals' functional targets. For menstrual fever, we identified a novel association in OPRM1 (rs17181171; P = 2.0 × 10-8), for which top variants were eQTLs in multiple tissues. A known dysmenorrhea signal near NGF replicated in our data (rs12030576; P = 1.1 × 10-19) and was associated with RP4-663N10.1 expression, a putative lncRNA enhancer of NGF, while a novel dysmenorrhea signal in the IL1 locus (rs80111889; P = 1.9 × 10-16) contained SNPs previously associated with endometriosis, and GWAS SNPs were most significantly associated with IL1A expression. By combining regional imputation with colocalization analysis of GWAS/eQTL signals along with integrated annotation with epigenomic data, this study further refines the sets of candidate causal variants and target genes for these known and novel gynecology-related trait loci.

5,734 Japanese ancestry female individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

11348
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
5,614 Japanese ancestry female individuals
Replication Participants
East Asian
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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