BMC Medical Genetics (Sep 2012)

Transferability and Fine Mapping of genome-wide associated loci for lipids in African Americans

  • Adeyemo Adebowale,
  • Bentley Amy R,
  • Meilleur Katherine G,
  • Doumatey Ayo P,
  • Chen Guanjie,
  • Zhou Jie,
  • Shriner Daniel,
  • Huang Hanxia,
  • Herbert Alan,
  • Gerry Norman P,
  • Christman Michael F,
  • Rotimi Charles N

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-13-88
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 88

Abstract

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Abstract Background A recent, large genome-wide association study (GWAS) of European ancestry individuals has identified multiple genetic variants influencing serum lipids. Studies of the transferability of these associations to African Americans remain few, an important limitation given interethnic differences in serum lipids and the disproportionate burden of lipid-associated metabolic diseases among African Americans. Methods We attempted to evaluate the transferability of 95 lipid-associated loci recently identified in European ancestry individuals to 887 non-diabetic, unrelated African Americans from a population-based sample in the Washington, DC area. Additionally, we took advantage of the generally reduced linkage disequilibrium among African ancestry populations in comparison to European ancestry populations to fine-map replicated GWAS signals. Results We successfully replicated reported associations for 10 loci (CILP2/SF4, STARD3, LPL, CYP7A1, DOCK7/ANGPTL3, APOE, SORT1, IRS1, CETP, and UBASH3B). Through trans-ethnic fine-mapping, we were able to reduce associated regions around 75% of the loci that replicated. Conclusions Between this study and previous work in African Americans, 40 of the 95 loci reported in a large GWAS of European ancestry individuals also influence lipid levels in African Americans. While there is now evidence that the lipid-influencing role of a number of genetic variants is observed in both European and African ancestry populations, the still considerable lack of concordance highlights the importance of continued ancestry-specific studies to elucidate the genetic underpinnings of these traits.

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