Authors |
Xiuwen Zheng, Yao Hu, Deepti Jain, Cecelia A. Laurie, Stephanie M. Gogarten, Ming-Huei Chen, Jeffrey R. O'Connell, Joshua P. Lewis, Laura M. Raffield, Adolfo Correa, L. Adrienne Cupples, the TOPMed Hematology and Hemostasis Working Group, Ken M. Rice, Andrew D. Johnson, Cathy C. Laurie, Alex P. Reiner
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Abstract Text |
Red blood cell (RBC) measurements are polygenic traits, and genome-wide association studies (GWAS), exome chip and sequencing analyses have identified hundreds of associated genetic variants in European-, Asian-, African- and Hispanic-ancestry populations. However, additional loci remain undiscovered and causal variant(s) at each locus have not been well characterized. We performed whole genome sequencing (WGS) analyses for hemoglobin (HGB), hematocrit (HCT), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), RBC count and red cell distribution width (RDW) in a multi-ethnic population from phase 1 of the NHLBI TOPMed Project. 7,490 Amish-, European- and African-ancestry individuals from the Old Order Amish Study, the Framingham Heart Study and the Jackson Heart Study, respectively, were pooled for single variant tests using inverse-normal transformed residuals as outcomes, with adjustment for age, sex, study, relatedness, population structure, and residual heteroscedasticity. We identified nine putatively novel loci reaching genome-wide significance (P<5E-8), including two each for HGB (4q22-rs10030052 and ADAMTS20-rs563075310, MAF=0.001), HCT (4q22-rs10030052 and chrX: 53479481, MAF=0.001), MCH (1p11-rs114421285 and 2q14.1-rs150467776, MAF=0.013 and 0.005, respectively) and MCHC (ELOVL6-rs111995643 and PHACTR-rs141007575, MAF=0.014 and 0.001, respectively), and one each for RBC count (ITPR3-rs555173304, MAF=0.004) and RDW (chr22: 51068271, MAF=0.001). The novel variants showed disparate allele frequencies across European and African ancestral populations, and will require validation in additional independent samples. We also confirmed seven previously reported loci for associations with multiple RBC traits. The lead variant for six (HFE, BYSL, MYB, TMPRSS6, CD36 and G6PD) was the same as the reported index SNP or in strong LD (r2>0.8). The lead variants at ITFG3/LUC7L for MCH, MCHC, MCV and RBC were in strong LD with the reported index SNP while lead variants for HGB and RDW were not. At the HBB locus, the strongest association signal was rs34598529, with novel evidence of associations with MCH, MCV, RBC and RDW (P≤9E-9). This variant lies in a putative erythroid regulatory element and has been identified in African American beta thalassemia patients. In summary, our initial results suggest identification of novel rare RBC variants from WGS analyses of a multi-ethnic population.
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