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GWAS Study

Genome-wide discovery of genetic loci that uncouple excess adiposity from its comorbidities.

Huang LO, Rauch A, Mazzaferro E et al.

33619380 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
287833 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HL
Huang LO
RA
Rauch A
ME
Mazzaferro E
PM
Preuss M
CS
Carobbio S
BC
Bayrak CS
CN
Chami N
WZ
Wang Z
SU
Schick UM
YN
Yang N
IY
Itan Y
VA
Vidal-Puig A
DH
den Hoed M
MS
Mandrup S
KT
Kilpeläinen TO
LR
Loos RJF
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Obesity is a major risk factor for cardiometabolic diseases. Nevertheless, a substantial proportion of individuals with obesity do not suffer cardiometabolic comorbidities. The mechanisms that uncouple adiposity from its cardiometabolic complications are not fully understood. Here, we identify 62 loci of which the same allele is significantly associated with both higher adiposity and lower cardiometabolic risk. Functional analyses show that the 62 loci are enriched for genes expressed in adipose tissue, and for regulatory variants that influence nearby genes that affect adipocyte differentiation. Genes prioritized in each locus support a key role of fat distribution (FAM13A, IRS1 and PPARG) and adipocyte function (ALDH2, CCDC92, DNAH10, ESR1, FAM13A, MTOR, PIK3R1 and VEGFB). Several additional mechanisms are involved as well, such as insulin-glucose signalling (ADCY5, ARAP1, CREBBP, FAM13A, MTOR, PEPD, RAC1 and SH2B3), energy expenditure and fatty acid oxidation (IGF2BP2), browning of white adipose tissue (CSK, VEGFA, VEGFB and SLC22A3) and inflammation (SH2B3, DAGLB and ADCY9). Some of these genes may represent therapeutic targets to reduce cardiometabolic risk linked to excess adiposity.

277,811 European ancestry individuals, 10,022 East Asian, South Asian and African American ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

287833
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, African American or Afro-Caribbean, East Asian, South Asian, Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian), Hispanic or Latin American, South East Asian
Ancestry
U.K., U.S., Lebanon, Pakistan, Republic of Korea
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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Analysis In Progress

Our analysis of this publication is currently being prepared. Please check back soon for comprehensive insights into the health and genetic findings discussed in this research.