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GWAS Study

The derived allele of a novel intergenic variant at chromosome 11 associates with lower body mass index and a favorable metabolic phenotype in Greenlanders.

Andersen MK, Jørsboe E, Skotte L et al.

31978080 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
7213 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AM
Andersen MK
JE
Jørsboe E
SL
Skotte L
HK
Hanghøj K
SC
Sandholt CH
MI
Moltke I
GN
Grarup N
KT
Kern T
MY
Mahendran Y
SB
Søborg B
BP
Bjerregaard P
LC
Larsen CVL
DI
Dahl-Petersen IK
TH
Tiwari HK
FB
Feenstra B
KA
Koch A
WH
Wiener HW
HS
Hopkins SE
PO
Pedersen O
MM
Melbye M
BB
Boyer BB
JM
Jørgensen ME
AA
Albrechtsen A
HT
Hansen T
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The genetic architecture of the small and isolated Greenlandic population is advantageous for identification of novel genetic variants associated with cardio-metabolic traits. We aimed to identify genetic loci associated with body mass index (BMI), to expand the knowledge of the genetic and biological mechanisms underlying obesity. Stage 1 BMI-association analyses were performed in 4,626 Greenlanders. Stage 2 replication and meta-analysis were performed in additional cohorts comprising 1,058 Yup'ik Alaska Native people, and 1,529 Greenlanders. Obesity-related traits were assessed in the stage 1 study population. We identified a common variant on chromosome 11, rs4936356, where the derived G-allele had a frequency of 24% in the stage 1 study population. The derived allele was genome-wide significantly associated with lower BMI (beta (SE), -0.14 SD (0.03), p = 3.2x10-8), corresponding to 0.64 kg/m2 lower BMI per G allele in the stage 1 study population. We observed a similar effect in the Yup'ik cohort (-0.09 SD, p = 0.038), and a non-significant effect in the same direction in the independent Greenlandic stage 2 cohort (-0.03 SD, p = 0.514). The association remained genome-wide significant in meta-analysis of the Arctic cohorts (-0.10 SD (0.02), p = 4.7x10-8). Moreover, the variant was associated with a leaner body type (weight, -1.68 (0.37) kg; waist circumference, -1.52 (0.33) cm; hip circumference, -0.85 (0.24) cm; lean mass, -0.84 (0.19) kg; fat mass and percent, -1.66 (0.33) kg and -1.39 (0.27) %; visceral adipose tissue, -0.30 (0.07) cm; subcutaneous adipose tissue, -0.16 (0.05) cm, all p<0.0002), lower insulin resistance (HOMA-IR, -0.12 (0.04), p = 0.00021), and favorable lipid levels (triglyceride, -0.05 (0.02) mmol/l, p = 0.025; HDL-cholesterol, 0.04 (0.01) mmol/l, p = 0.0015). In conclusion, we identified a novel variant, where the derived G-allele possibly associated with lower BMI in Arctic populations, and as a consequence also leaner body type, lower insulin resistance, and a favorable lipid profile.

4,626 Greenlandic individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

7213
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
1,529 Greenlandic individuals, 1,058 Yup’ik Alaska Native ancestry individuals
Replication Participants
Other admixed ancestry, Native American
Ancestry
Greenland, Denmark, U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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