PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Common variants in a novel gene, FONG on chromosome 2q33.1 confer risk of osteoporosis in Japanese.

  • Ikuyo Kou,
  • Atsushi Takahashi,
  • Tomohiko Urano,
  • Naoshi Fukui,
  • Hideki Ito,
  • Kouichi Ozaki,
  • Toshihiro Tanaka,
  • Takayuki Hosoi,
  • Masataka Shiraki,
  • Satoshi Inoue,
  • Yusuke Nakamura,
  • Naoyuki Kamatani,
  • Michiaki Kubo,
  • Seijiro Mori,
  • Shiro Ikegawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019641
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 5
p. e19641

Abstract

Read online

Osteoporosis is a common disease characterized by low bone mass, decreased bone quality and increased predisposition to fracture. Genetic factors have been implicated in its etiology; however, the specific genes related to susceptibility to osteoporosis are not entirely known. To detect susceptibility genes for osteoporosis, we conducted a genome-wide association study in Japanese using ∼270,000 SNPs in 1,747 subjects (190 cases and 1,557 controls) followed by multiple levels of replication of the association using a total of ∼5,000 subjects (2,092 cases and 3,114 controls). Through these staged association studies followed by resequencing and linkage disequilibrium mapping, we identified a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs7605378 associated with osteoporosis. (combined P = 1.51×10(-8), odds ratio = 1.25). This SNP is in a previously unknown gene on chromosome 2q33.1, FONG. FONG is predicted to encode a 147 amino-acid protein with a formiminotransferase domain in its N-terminal (FTCD_N domain) and is ubiquitously expressed in various tissues including bone. Our findings would give a new insight into osteoporosis etiology and pathogenesis.