Diversity and Scale: Genetic Architecture of 2,068 Traits in the VA Million Veteran Program

Author:

Verma AnuragORCID,Huffman Jennifer E,Rodriguez Alex,Conery Mitchell,Liu Molei,Ho Yuk-LamORCID,Kim Youngdae,Heise David A,Guare Lindsay,Panickan Vidul Ayakulangara,Garcon Helene,Linares Franciel,Costa Lauren,Goethert Ian,Tipton Ryan,Honerlaw Jacqueline,Davies Laura,Whitbourne Stacey,Cohen Jeremy,Posner Daniel C,Sangar Rahul,Murray Michael,Wang Xuan,Dochtermann Daniel R,Devineni Poornima,Shi Yunling,Nandi Tarak Nath,Assimes Themistocles L,Brunette Charles A,Carroll Robert J,Clifford Royce,Duvall Scott,Gelernter JoelORCID,Hung Adriana,Iyengar Sudha K,Joseph Jacob,Kember RachelORCID,Kranzler Henry,Levey Daniel,Luoh Shiuh-Wen,Merritt Victoria C,Overstreet Cassie,Deak Joseph DORCID,Grant Struan F A,Polimanti RenatoORCID,Roussos Panos,Sun Yan V,Venkatesh Sanan,Voloudakis GeorgiosORCID,Justice Amy,Begoli Edmon,Ramoni Rachel,Tourassi Georgia,Pyarajan Saiju,Tsao Philip S,O’Donnell Christopher J,Muralidhar Sumitra,Moser Jennifer,Casas Juan P,Bick Alexander G,Zhou Wei,Cai TianxiORCID,Voight Benjamin FORCID,Cho Kelly,Gaziano Michael J,Madduri Ravi K,Damrauer Scott M,Liao Katherine P

Abstract

AbstractGenome-wide association studies (GWAS) have underrepresented individuals from non-European populations, impeding progress in characterizing the genetic architecture and consequences of health and disease traits. To address this, we present a population-stratified phenome-wide GWAS followed by a multi-population meta-analysis for 2,068 traits derived from electronic health records of 635,969 participants in the Million Veteran Program (MVP), a longitudinal cohort study of diverse U.S. Veterans genetically similar to the respective African (121,177), Admixed American (59,048), East Asian (6,702), and European (449,042) superpopulations defined by the 1000 Genomes Project. We identified 38,270 independent variants associating with one or more traits at experiment-wide (P < 4.6x10-11) significance; fine-mapping 6,318 signals identified from 613 traits to single-variant resolution. Among these, a third (2,069) of the associations were found only among participants genetically similar to non-European reference populations, demonstrating the importance of expanding diversity in genetic studies. Our work provides a comprehensive atlas of phenome-wide genetic associations for future studies dissecting the architecture of complex traits in diverse populations.One Sentence SummaryTo address the underrepresentation of non-European individuals in genome-wide association studies (GWAS), we conducted a population-stratified phenome-wide GWAS across 2,068 traits in 635,969 participants from the diverse U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Million Veteran Program, with results expanding our knowledge of variant-trait associations and highlighting the importance of genetic diversity in understanding the architecture of complex health and disease traits.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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