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GWAS Study

The eMERGE genotype set of 83,717 subjects imputed to ~40 million variants genome wide and association with the herpes zoster medical record phenotype.

Stanaway IB, Hall TO, Rosenthal EA et al.

30298529 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
46350 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SI
Stanaway IB
HT
Hall TO
RE
Rosenthal EA
PM
Palmer M
NV
Naranbhai V
KR
Knevel R
NB
Namjou-Khales B
CR
Carroll RJ
KK
Kiryluk K
GA
Gordon AS
LJ
Linder J
HK
Howell KM
MB
Mapes BM
LF
Lin FTJ
JY
Joo YY
HM
Hayes MG
GA
Gharavi AG
PS
Pendergrass SA
RM
Ritchie MD
DA
de Andrade M
CD
Croteau-Chonka DC
RS
Raychaudhuri S
WS
Weiss ST
LM
Lebo M
AS
Amr SS
CD
Carrell D
LE
Larson EB
CC
Chute CG
RL
Rasmussen-Torvik LJ
RM
Roy-Puckelwartz MJ
SP
Sleiman P
HH
Hakonarson H
LR
Li R
KE
Karlson EW
PJ
Peterson JF
KI
Kullo IJ
CR
Chisholm R
DJ
Denny JC
JG
Jarvik GP
CD
Crosslin DR
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) network is a network of medical centers with electronic medical records linked to existing biorepository samples for genomic discovery and genomic medicine research. The network sought to unify the genetic results from 78 Illumina and Affymetrix genotype array batches from 12 contributing medical centers for joint association analysis of 83,717 human participants. In this report, we describe the imputation of eMERGE results and methods to create the unified imputed merged set of genome-wide variant genotype data. We imputed the data using the Michigan Imputation Server, which provides a missing single-nucleotide variant genotype imputation service using the minimac3 imputation algorithm with the Haplotype Reference Consortium genotype reference set. We describe the quality control and filtering steps used in the generation of this data set and suggest generalizable quality thresholds for imputation and phenotype association studies. To test the merged imputed genotype set, we replicated a previously reported chromosome 6 HLA-B herpes zoster (shingles) association and discovered a novel zoster-associated loci in an epigenetic binding site near the terminus of chromosome 3 (3p29).

3,201 European ancestry cases, 34,960 European ancestry controls, 398 African American cases, 5,922 African American controls, 756 Asian ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

46350
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African American or Afro-Caribbean, Asian unspecified, European
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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