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GWAS Study

The contribution of common and rare genetic variants to variation in metabolic traits in 288,137 East Asians.

Kim YJ, Moon S, Hwang MY et al.

36333282 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
288127 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

KY
Kim YJ
MS
Moon S
HM
Hwang MY
HS
Han S
JH
Jang HM
KJ
Kong J
SD
Shin DM
YK
Yoon K
KS
Kim SM
LJ
Lee JE
MA
Mahajan A
PH
Park HY
MM
McCarthy MI
CY
Cho YS
KB
Kim BJ
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Metabolic traits are heritable phenotypes widely-used in assessing the risk of various diseases. We conduct a genome-wide association analysis (GWAS) of nine metabolic traits (including glycemic, lipid, liver enzyme levels) in 125,872 Korean subjects genotyped with the Korea Biobank Array. Following meta-analysis with GWAS from Biobank Japan identify 144 novel signals (MAF ≥ 1%), of which 57.0% are replicated in UK Biobank. Additionally, we discover 66 rare (MAF < 1%) variants, 94.4% of them co-incident to common loci, adding to allelic series. Although rare variants have limited contribution to overall trait variance, these lead, in carriers, substantial loss of predictive accuracy from polygenic predictions of disease risk from common variant alone. We capture groups with up to 16-fold variation in type 2 diabetes (T2D) prevalence by integration of genetic risk scores of fasting plasma glucose and T2D and the I349F rare protective variant. This study highlights the need to consider the joint contribution of both common and rare variants on inherited risk of metabolic traits and related diseases.

288,127 East Asian ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

288127
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian
Ancestry
Japan, Republic of Korea
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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