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Identification of ten loci associated with height highlights new biological pathways in human growth
Authors:Lettre Guillaume  Jackson Anne U  Gieger Christian  Schumacher Fredrick R  Berndt Sonja I  Sanna Serena  Eyheramendy Susana  Voight Benjamin F  Butler Johannah L  Guiducci Candace  Illig Thomas  Hackett Rachel  Heid Iris M  Jacobs Kevin B  Lyssenko Valeriya  Uda Manuela;Diabetes Genetics Initiative;FUSION;KORA;Prostate  Lung Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial;Nurses' Health Study;SardiNIA  Boehnke Michael  Chanock Stephen J  Groop Leif C  Hu Frank B  Isomaa Bo  Kraft Peter  Peltonen Leena  Salomaa Veikko  Schlessinger David  Hunter David J  Hayes Richard B  Abecasis Gonçalo R  Wichmann H-Erich  Mohlke Karen L
Institution:Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA.
Abstract:Height is a classic polygenic trait, reflecting the combined influence of multiple as-yet-undiscovered genetic factors. We carried out a meta-analysis of genome-wide association study data of height from 15,821 individuals at 2.2 million SNPs, and followed up the strongest findings in >10,000 subjects. Ten newly identified and two previously reported loci were strongly associated with variation in height (P values from 4 x 10(-7) to 8 x 10(-22)). Together, these 12 loci account for approximately 2% of the population variation in height. Individuals with < or =8 height-increasing alleles and > or =16 height-increasing alleles differ in height by approximately 3.5 cm. The newly identified loci, along with several additional loci with strongly suggestive associations, encompass both strong biological candidates and unexpected genes, and highlight several pathways (let-7 targets, chromatin remodeling proteins and Hedgehog signaling) as important regulators of human stature. These results expand the picture of the biological regulation of human height and of the genetic architecture of this classical complex trait.
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