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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association studies and cross-population meta-analyses investigating short and long sleep duration.

Austin-Zimmerman I, Levey DF, Giannakopoulou O et al.

37770476 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
26657 Participants
138 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AI
Austin-Zimmerman I
LD
Levey DF
GO
Giannakopoulou O
DJ
Deak JD
GM
Galimberti M
AK
Adhikari K
ZH
Zhou H
DS
Denaxas S
IH
Irizar H
KK
Kuchenbaecker K
MA
McQuillin A
CJ
Concato J
BD
Buysse DJ
GJ
Gaziano JM
GD
Gottlieb DJ
PR
Polimanti R
SM
Stein MB
BE
Bramon E
GJ
Gelernter J
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Sleep duration has been linked to a wide range of negative health outcomes and to reduced life expectancy. We present genome-wide association studies of short ( ≤ 5 h) and long ( ≥ 10 h) sleep duration in adults of European (N = 445,966), African (N = 27,785), East Asian (N = 3141), and admixed-American (N = 16,250) ancestry from UK Biobank and the Million Veteran Programme. In a cross-population meta-analysis, we identify 84 independent loci for short sleep and 1 for long sleep. We estimate SNP-based heritability for both sleep traits in each ancestry based on population derived linkage disequilibrium (LD) scores using cov-LDSC. We identify positive genetic correlation between short and long sleep traits (rg = 0.16 ± 0.04; p = 0.0002), as well as similar patterns of genetic correlation with other psychiatric and cardiometabolic phenotypes. Mendelian randomisation reveals a directional causal relationship between short sleep and depression, and a bidirectional causal relationship between long sleep and depression.

11,352 African ancestry cases, 15,305 African ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

26657
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African unspecified, European, East Asian, Hispanic or Latin American
Ancestry
U.S., U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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