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GWAS Study

Imputation of orofacial clefting data identifies novel risk loci and sheds light on the genetic background of cleft lip ± cleft palate and cleft palate only.

Ludwig KU, Böhmer AC, Bowes J et al.

28087736 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
8309 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

LK
Ludwig KU
BA
Böhmer AC
BJ
Bowes J
NM
Nikolic M
IN
Ishorst N
WN
Wyatt N
HN
Hammond NL
GL
Gölz L
TF
Thieme F
BS
Barth S
SH
Schuenke H
KJ
Klamt J
SM
Spielmann M
AK
Aldhorae K
RA
Rojas-Martinez A
NM
Nöthen MM
RA
Rada-Iglesias A
DM
Dixon MJ
KM
Knapp M
ME
Mangold E
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (nsCL/P) is among the most common human birth defects with multifactorial etiology. Here, we present results from a genome-wide imputation study of nsCL/P in which, after adding replication cohort data, four novel risk loci for nsCL/P are identified (at chromosomal regions 2p21, 14q22, 15q24 and 19p13). On a systematic level, we show that the association signals within this high-density dataset are enriched in functionally-relevant genomic regions that are active in both human neural crest cells (hNCC) and mouse embryonic craniofacial tissue. This enrichment is also detectable in hNCC regions primed for later activity. Using GCTA analyses, we suggest that 30% of the estimated variance in risk for nsCL/P in the European population can be attributed to common variants, with 25.5% contributed to by the 24 risk loci known to date. For each of these, we identify credible SNPs using a Bayesian refinement approach, with two loci harbouring only one probable causal variant. Finally, we demonstrate that there is no polygenic component of nsCL/P detectable that is shared with nonsyndromic cleft palate only (nsCPO). Our data suggest that, while common variants are strongly contributing to risk for nsCL/P, they do not seem to be involved in nsCPO which might be more often caused by rare deleterious variants. Our study generates novel insights into both nsCL/P and nsCPO etiology and provides a systematic framework for research into craniofacial development and malformation.

399 European ancestry cases, 1,318 European ancestry controls, 666 European ancestry trios, 795 Asian trios

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

8309
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
224 European ancestry cases, 921 European ancestry controls, 152 Mayan cases, 323 Mayan controls, 198 Middle Eastern cases, 391 Middle Eastern controls
Replication Participants
European, Asian unspecified, Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian), Hispanic or Latin American
Ancestry
Yemen, Germany, Mexico
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

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