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GWAS Study

Genome-wide association study of maternal and inherited loci for conotruncal heart defects.

Agopian AJ, Mitchell LE, Glessner J et al.

24800985 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
2942 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AA
Agopian AJ
ML
Mitchell LE
GJ
Glessner J
BA
Bhalla AD
SA
Sewda A
HH
Hakonarson H
GE
Goldmuntz E
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Conotruncal and related heart defects (CTDs) are a group of serious and relatively common birth defects. Although both maternal and inherited genotypes are thought to play a role in the etiology of CTDs, few specific genetic risk factors have been identified. To determine whether common variants acting through the genotype of the mother (e.g. via an in utero effect) or the case are associated with CTDs, we conducted a genome-wide association study of 750 CTD case-parent triads, with follow-up analyses in 358 independent triads. Log-linear analyses were used to assess the association of CTDs with the genotypes of both the mother and case. No association achieved genomewide significance in either the discovery or combined (discovery+follow-up) samples. However, three loci with p-values suggestive of association (p<10-5) in the discovery sample had p-values <0.05 in the follow-up sample and p-values in the combined data that were lower than in the discovery sample. These included suggestive association with an inherited intergenic variant at 20p12.3 (rs6140038, combined p = 1.0 × 10(-5)) and an inherited intronic variant in KCNJ4 at 22q13.1 (rs2267386, combined p = 9.8 × 10(-6)), as well as with a maternal variant in SLC22A24 at 11q12.3 (rs11231379, combined p = 4.2 × 10(-6)). These observations suggest novel candidate loci for CTDs, including loci that appear to be associated with the risk of CTDs via the maternal genotype, but further studies are needed to confirm these associations.

537 European ancestry case-parent trios, 213 case-parent trios

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

2942
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
348 European ancestry case-parent trios, 10 case-parent trios
Replication Participants
Other, European, Other, European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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