학술논문

A unified framework identifies new links between plasma lipids and diseases from electronic medical records across large-scale cohorts
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Genetics. 53(7)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Prevention
Human Genome
Biotechnology
Generic health relevance
Good Health and Well Being
Alleles
Biological Specimen Banks
Biomarkers
Disease Susceptibility
Electronic Health Records
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Humans
Lipids
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Public Health Surveillance
Quantitative Trait
Heritable
United Kingdom
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Agricultural biotechnology
Bioinformatics and computational biology
Language
Abstract
Plasma lipids are known heritable risk factors for cardiovascular disease, but increasing evidence also supports shared genetics with diseases of other organ systems. We devised a comprehensive three-phase framework to identify new lipid-associated genes and study the relationships among lipids, genotypes, gene expression and hundreds of complex human diseases from the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (347 traits) and the UK Biobank (549 traits). Aside from 67 new lipid-associated genes with strong replication, we found evidence for pleiotropic SNPs/genes between lipids and diseases across the phenome. These include discordant pleiotropy in the HLA region between lipids and multiple sclerosis and putative causal paths between triglycerides and gout, among several others. Our findings give insights into the genetic basis of the relationship between plasma lipids and diseases on a phenome-wide scale and can provide context for future prevention and treatment strategies.