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Association between expression quantitative trait loci and metabolic traits in two Korean populations
  • 작성일2018-02-05
  • 최종수정일2018-02-05
  • 담당부서연구기획과
  • 연락처043-719-8033
  • 1,958
PLOS ONE, 2014, 01, 1─13

Association between expression quantitative trait loci and metabolic traits in two Korean populations

Hong KW, Jeong SW, Chung M, Cho SB

Abstract

    Most genome-wide association studies consider genes that are located closest to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are highly significant for those studies. However, the significance of the associations between SNPs and candidate genes has not been fully determined. An alternative approach that used SNPs in expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) was reported previously for Crohn's disease; it was shown that eQTL-based preselection for follow-up studies was a useful approach for identifying risk loci from the results of moderately sized GWAS. In this study, we propose an approach that uses eQTL SNPs to support the functional relationships between an SNP and a candidate gene in a genome-wide association study. The genome-wide SNP genotypes and 10 biochemical measures (fasting glucose levels, BUN, serum albumin levels, AST, ALT, gamma GTP, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and LDL cholesterol) were obtained from the Korean Association Resource (KARE) consortium. The eQTL SNPs were isolated from the SNP dataset based on the RegulomeDB eQTL-SNP data from the ENCODE projects and two recent eQTL reports. A total of 25,658 eQTL SNPs were tested for their association with the 10 metabolic traits in 2 Korean populations (Ansung and Ansan). The proportion of phenotypic variance explained by eQTL and non-eQTL SNPs showed that eQTL SNPs were more likely to be associated with the metabolic traits genetically compared with non-eQTL SNPs. Finally, via a meta-analysis of the two Korean populations, we identified 14 eQTL SNPs that were significantly associated with metabolic traits. These results suggest that our approach can be expanded to other genome-wide association studies


  • ISBN or ISSN: 1932-6203

  • 본 연구는 질병관리본부 연구개발과제(과제번호 2013-NG72001-00) 연구비를 지원받아 수행되었습니다.
  • This research was supported by a fund(code 2013-NG72001-00) by Research of Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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