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GWAS Study

The influence of rare variants in circulating metabolic biomarkers.

Riveros-Mckay F, Oliver-Williams C, Karthikeyan S et al.

32150548 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
7142 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

RF
Riveros-Mckay F
OC
Oliver-Williams C
KS
Karthikeyan S
WK
Walter K
KK
Kundu K
OW
Ouwehand WH
RD
Roberts D
DA
Di Angelantonio E
SN
Soranzo N
DJ
Danesh J
WE
Wheeler E
ZE
Zeggini E
BA
Butterworth AS
BI
Barroso I
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Circulating metabolite levels are biomarkers for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Here we studied, association of rare variants and 226 serum lipoproteins, lipids and amino acids in 7,142 (discovery plus follow-up) healthy participants. We leveraged the information from multiple metabolite measurements on the same participants to improve discovery in rare variant association analyses for gene-based and gene-set tests by incorporating correlated metabolites as covariates in the validation stage. Gene-based analysis corrected for the effective number of tests performed, confirmed established associations at APOB, APOC3, PAH, HAL and PCSK (p<1.32x10-7) and identified novel gene-trait associations at a lower stringency threshold with ACSL1, MYCN, FBXO36 and B4GALNT3 (p<2.5x10-6). Regulation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex was associated for the first time, in gene-set analyses also corrected for effective number of tests, with IDL and LDL parameters, as well as circulating cholesterol (pMETASKAT<2.41x10-6). In conclusion, using an approach that leverages metabolite measurements obtained in the same participants, we identified novel loci and pathways involved in the regulation of these important metabolic biomarkers. As large-scale biobanks continue to amass sequencing and phenotypic information, analytical approaches such as ours will be useful to fully exploit the copious amounts of biological data generated in these efforts.

7,142 European ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

7142
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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