Author:
Carland Corinne,Png Grace,Malarstig Anders,Kho Pik Fang,Gustafsson Stefan,Michaelsson Karl,Lind Lars,Tsafantakis Emmanouil,Karaleftheri Maria,Dedoussis George,Ramisch Anna,Macdonald-Dunlop Erin,Klaric Lucija,Joshi Peter K.,Chen Yan,Björck Hanna M.,Eriksson Per,Carrasco-Zanini Julia,Wheeler Eleanor,Suhre Karsten,Gilly Arthur,Zeggini Eleftheria,Viñuela Ana,Dermitzakis Emmanouil T.,Wilson James F.,Langenberg Claudia,Thareja Gaurav,Halama Anna,Schmidt Frank,Zanetti Daniela,Assimes Themistocles,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Human plasma contains a wide variety of circulating proteins. These proteins can be important clinical biomarkers in disease and also possible drug targets. Large scale genomics studies of circulating proteins can identify genetic variants that lead to relative protein abundance.
Methods
We conducted a meta-analysis on genome-wide association studies of autosomal chromosomes in 22,997 individuals of primarily European ancestry across 12 cohorts to identify protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) for 92 cardiometabolic associated plasma proteins.
Results
We identified 503 (337 cis and 166 trans) conditionally independent pQTLs, including several novel variants not reported in the literature. We conducted a sex-stratified analysis and found that 118 (23.5%) of pQTLs demonstrated heterogeneity between sexes. The direction of effect was preserved but there were differences in effect size and significance. Additionally, we annotate trans-pQTLs with nearest genes and report plausible biological relationships. Using Mendelian randomization, we identified causal associations for 18 proteins across 19 phenotypes, of which 10 have additional genetic colocalization evidence. We highlight proteins associated with a constellation of cardiometabolic traits including angiopoietin-related protein 7 (ANGPTL7) and Semaphorin 3F (SEMA3F).
Conclusion
Through large-scale analysis of protein quantitative trait loci, we provide a comprehensive overview of common variants associated with plasma proteins. We highlight possible biological relationships which may serve as a basis for further investigation into possible causal roles in cardiometabolic diseases.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine,Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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