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GWAS Study

Genome-wide landscape establishes novel association signals for metabolic traits in the Arab population.

Hebbar P, Abubaker JA, Abu-Farha M et al.

32902719 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2732 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HP
Hebbar P
AJ
Abubaker JA
AM
Abu-Farha M
AO
Alsmadi O
EN
Elkum N
AF
Alkayal F
JS
John SE
CA
Channanath A
IR
Iqbal R
PJ
Pitkaniemi J
TJ
Tuomilehto J
SR
Sladek R
AF
Al-Mulla F
TT
Thanaraj TA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

While the Arabian population has a high prevalence of metabolic disorders, it has not been included in global studies that identify genetic risk loci for metabolic traits. Determining the transferability of such largely Euro-centric established risk loci is essential to transfer the research tools/resources, and drug targets generated by global studies to a broad range of ethnic populations. Further, consideration of populations such as Arabs, that are characterized by consanguinity and a high level of inbreeding, can lead to identification of novel risk loci. We imputed published GWAS data from two Kuwaiti Arab cohorts (n = 1434 and 1298) to the 1000 Genomes Project haplotypes and performed meta-analysis for associations with 13 metabolic traits. We compared the observed association signals with those established for metabolic traits. Our study highlighted 70 variants from 9 different genes, some of which have established links to metabolic disorders. By relaxing the genome-wide significance threshold, we identified 'novel' risk variants from 11 genes for metabolic traits. Many novel risk variant association signals were observed at or borderline to genome-wide significance. Furthermore, 349 previously established variants from 187 genes were validated in our study. Pleiotropic effect of risk variants on multiple metabolic traits were observed. Fine-mapping illuminated rs7838666/CSMD1 rs1864163/CETP and rs112861901/[INTS10,LPL] as candidate causal variants influencing fasting plasma glucose and high-density lipoprotein levels. Computational functional analysis identified a variety of gene regulatory signals around several variants. This study enlarges the population ancestry diversity of available GWAS and elucidates new variants in an ethnic group burdened with metabolic disorders.

2,732 Kuwaiti ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2732
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian)
Ancestry
Kuwait
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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