School of Medicine Publications and Presentations
Rare coding variants in 35 genes associate with circulating lipid levels-A multi-ancestry analysis of 170,000 exomes
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-6-2022
Abstract
Large-scale gene sequencing studies for complex traits have the potential to identify causal genes with therapeutic implications. We performed gene-based association testing of blood lipid levels with rare (minor allele frequency < 1%) predicted damaging coding variation by using sequence data from >170,000 individuals from multiple ancestries: 97,493 European, 30,025 South Asian, 16,507 African, 16,440 Hispanic/Latino, 10,420 East Asian, and 1,182 Samoan. We identified 35 genes associated with circulating lipid levels; some of these genes have not been previously associated with lipid levels when using rare coding variation from population-based samples. We prioritize 32 genes in array-based genome-wide association study (GWAS) loci based on aggregations of rare coding variants; three (EVI5, SH2B3, and PLIN1) had no prior association of rare coding variants with lipid levels. Most of our associated genes showed evidence of association among multiple ancestries. Finally, we observed an enrichment of gene-based associations for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol drug target genes and for genes closest to GWAS index single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Our results demonstrate that gene-based associations can be beneficial for drug target development and provide evidence that the gene closest to the array-based GWAS index SNP is often the functional gene for blood lipid levels.
Recommended Citation
Hindy, G., Dornbos, P., Chaffin, M. D., Liu, D. J., Wang, M., Selvaraj, M. S., Zhang, D., Park, J., Aguilar-Salinas, C. A., Antonacci-Fulton, L., Ardissino, D., Arnett, D. K., Aslibekyan, S., Atzmon, G., Ballantyne, C. M., Barajas-Olmos, F., Barzilai, N., Becker, L. C., Bielak, L. F., Bis, J. C., … Peloso, G. M. (2022). Rare coding variants in 35 genes associate with circulating lipid levels-A multi-ancestry analysis of 170,000 exomes. American journal of human genetics, 109(1), 81–96. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.11.021
Publication Title
American Journal of Human Genetics
DOI
10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.11.021
Academic Level
faculty
Mentor/PI Department
Office of Human Genetics
Comments
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