Abstract Text |
Background: Low or declining handgrip strength, a widely used proxy of muscular fitness and marker of frailty, predicts a range of morbidities and all-cause mortality. We compared different strategies to perform genome-wide association analyses of longitudinal handgrip measurements using sequence data from the NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) program.
Methods: We analyzed 12,337 ethnically diverse participants (77.3% European-Ancestry (EA), 21.6% African-Ancestry (AA), 1.1% other) from six cohort studies (Amish, ARIC, CHS, FHS, HyperGEN, and WHI). Participants had between two and six handgrip measures per exam, from 1-9 separate exams over time, totaling 32,236 observations. Per participant, we selected the maximum observation at each exam and used all exams (ALL), one exam (ONE), or the mean of all exams (MEAN). Linear mixed-effects models were used to conduct association analyses with GMMAT, adjusting for age, sex, height, BMI, study, age×sex, BMI×sex, study×sex, and 11 ancestry principal components, with random effects for study and kinship; and for individual if multiple measures, to account for correlation across exams.
Results: Leveraging multiple measures per participant (ALL) resulted in a 7-13% increase in effective sample size. Genomic control inflation factors were similar and p-values/effect sizes highly correlated (r≥0.85) between analyses. We detected a significant association (lead variant rs4793937, MAF=0.18, P=3.4×10-8, PEA=1.6×10-6, PAA=0.004) in the homeobox B3 (HOXB3) gene, a handgrip GWAS locus (lead variant rs2288278, MAF=0.38, Willems et al., 2017). The TOPMed rs2288278 association was modest (PEA=0.004, PAA=0.92) and the rs4793937 association remained significant after conditioning on rs2288278 (P=2.2×10-6), suggesting two distinct signals (r2EA=0.41; r2AA=0.11). Both variants are expression and DNA methylation quantitative trait loci of HOXB genes in human skeletal muscle tissue (GTEx & FUSION). Validation of these results in the UK Biobank is ongoing.
Conclusion: Leveraging multi-ethnic populations along with longitudinal data in mixed-effects models help identify additional signals in GWAS loci.
|