학술논문

Exome Genotyping Identifies Pleiotropic Variants Associated with Red Blood Cell Traits
Document Type
article
Author
Chami, NathalieChen, Ming-HueiSlater, Andrew JEicher, John DEvangelou, EvangelosTajuddin, Salman MLove-Gregory, LatishaKacprowski, TimSchick, Ursula MNomura, AkihiroGiri, AyushLessard, SamuelBrody, Jennifer ASchurmann, ClaudiaPankratz, NathanYanek, Lisa RManichaikul, AniPazoki, RahaMihailov, EvelinHill, W DavidRaffield, Laura MBurt, AmberBartz, Traci MBecker, Diane MBecker, Lewis CBoerwinkle, EricBork-Jensen, JetteBottinger, Erwin PO’Donoghue, Michelle LCrosslin, David Rde Denus, SimonDubé, Marie-PierreElliott, PaulEngström, GunnarEvans, Michele KFloyd, James SFornage, MyriamGao, HeGreinacher, AndreasGudnason, VilmundurHansen, TorbenHarris, Tamara BHayward, CarolineHernesniemi, JussiHighland, Heather MHirschhorn, Joel NHofman, AlbertIrvin, Marguerite RKähönen, MikaLange, EthanLauner, Lenore JLehtimäki, TerhoLi, JinLiewald, David CMLinneberg, AllanLiu, YongmeiLu, YingchangLyytikäinen, Leo-PekkaMägi, ReedikMathias, Rasika AMelander, OlleMetspalu, AndresMononen, NinaNalls, Mike ANickerson, Deborah ANikus, KjellO’Donnell, Chris JOrho-Melander, MarjuPedersen, OlufPetersmann, AstridPolfus, LindaPsaty, Bruce MRaitakari, Olli TRaitoharju, EmmaRichard, MelissaRice, Kenneth MRivadeneira, FernandoRotter, Jerome ISchmidt, FrankSmith, Albert VernonStarr, John MTaylor, Kent DTeumer, AlexanderThuesen, Betina HTorstenson, Eric STracy, Russell PTzoulaki, IoannaZakai, Neil AVacchi-Suzzi, Caterinavan Duijn, Cornelia Mvan Rooij, Frank JACushman, MaryDeary, Ian JEdwards, Digna R VelezVergnaud, Anne-ClaireWallentin, LarsWaterworth, Dawn MWhite, Harvey DWilson, James GZonderman, Alan B
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. 99(1)
Subject
Epidemiology
Biological Sciences
Health Sciences
Genetics
Rare Diseases
Hematology
Human Genome
Clinical Research
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Black or African American
Allelic Imbalance
Erythrocyte Indices
Erythrocytes
Erythropoiesis
Exome
Gene Frequency
Genetic Pleiotropy
Genetic Variation
Genotype
Hematocrit
Hemoglobins
Humans
Quantitative Trait Loci
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Red blood cell (RBC) traits are important heritable clinical biomarkers and modifiers of disease severity. To identify coding genetic variants associated with these traits, we conducted meta-analyses of seven RBC phenotypes in 130,273 multi-ethnic individuals from studies genotyped on an exome array. After conditional analyses and replication in 27,480 independent individuals, we identified 16 new RBC variants. We found low-frequency missense variants in MAP1A (rs55707100, minor allele frequency [MAF] = 3.3%, p = 2 × 10(-10) for hemoglobin [HGB]) and HNF4A (rs1800961, MAF = 2.4%, p < 3 × 10(-8) for hematocrit [HCT] and HGB). In African Americans, we identified a nonsense variant in CD36 associated with higher RBC distribution width (rs3211938, MAF = 8.7%, p = 7 × 10(-11)) and showed that it is associated with lower CD36 expression and strong allelic imbalance in ex vivo differentiated human erythroblasts. We also identified a rare missense variant in ALAS2 (rs201062903, MAF = 0.2%) associated with lower mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (p < 8 × 10(-9)). Mendelian mutations in ALAS2 are a cause of sideroblastic anemia and erythropoietic protoporphyria. Gene-based testing highlighted three rare missense variants in PKLR, a gene mutated in Mendelian non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia, associated with HGB and HCT (SKAT p < 8 × 10(-7)). These rare, low-frequency, and common RBC variants showed pleiotropy, being also associated with platelet, white blood cell, and lipid traits. Our association results and functional annotation suggest the involvement of new genes in human erythropoiesis. We also confirm that rare and low-frequency variants play a role in the architecture of complex human traits, although their phenotypic effect is generally smaller than originally anticipated.