Potential etiologic and functional implications of genome-wide association loci for human diseases and traits
Office of Public Health Genomics · National Human Genome Research Institute · +2 more institutions
Abstract
We have developed an online catalog of SNP-trait associations from published genome-wide association studies for use in investigating genomic characteristics of trait/disease-associated SNPs (TASs). Reported TASs were common [median risk allele frequency 36%, interquartile range (IQR) 21%-53%] and were associated with modest effect sizes [median odds ratio (OR) 1.33, IQR 1.20-1.61]. Among 20 genomic annotation sets, reported TASs were significantly overrepresented only in nonsynonymous sites [OR = 3.9 (2.2-7.0), p = 3.5 x 10(-7)] and 5kb-promoter regions [OR = 2.3 (1.5-3.6), p = 3 x 10(-4)] compared to SNPs randomly selected from genotyping arrays. Although 88% of TASs were intronic (45%) or intergenic (43%),…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 203.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
7- LALucia A. HindorffCorresponding
Office of Public Health Genomics, National Human Genome Research Institute
- PSPraveen Sethupathy
National Human Genome Research Institute
- HJHeather Junkins
National Institutes of Health, Office of Public Health Genomics
- EMErin M. Ramos
National Institutes of Health, Office of Public Health Genomics
- JPJayashri P. Mehta
National Institutes of Health, National Center for Biotechnology Information
Topics & keywords
- Genome-wide association study
- Single-nucleotide polymorphism
- Genetics
- Biology
- Intergenic region
- Genetic association
- Genotyping
- Nonsynonymous substitution