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Common variants near MC4R are associated with fat mass, weight and risk of obesity
Authors:Loos Ruth J F  Lindgren Cecilia M  Li Shengxu  Wheeler Eleanor  Zhao Jing Hua  Prokopenko Inga  Inouye Michael  Freathy Rachel M  Attwood Antony P  Beckmann Jacques S  Berndt Sonja I;Prostate  Lung  Colorectal  and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial  Jacobs Kevin B  Chanock Stephen J  Hayes Richard B  Bergmann Sven  Bennett Amanda J  Bingham Sheila A  Bochud Murielle  Brown Morris  Cauchi Stéphane  Connell John M  Cooper Cyrus  Smith George Davey  Day Ian  Dina Christian  De Subhajyoti  Dermitzakis Emmanouil T  Doney Alex S F  Elliott Katherine S  Elliott Paul  Evans David M  Sadaf Farooqi I  Froguel Philippe  Ghori Jilur
Institution:MRC Epidemiology Unit, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, UK.
Abstract:To identify common variants influencing body mass index (BMI), we analyzed genome-wide association data from 16,876 individuals of European descent. After previously reported variants in FTO, the strongest association signal (rs17782313, P = 2.9 x 10(-6)) mapped 188 kb downstream of MC4R (melanocortin-4 receptor), mutations of which are the leading cause of monogenic severe childhood-onset obesity. We confirmed the BMI association in 60,352 adults (per-allele effect = 0.05 Z-score units; P = 2.8 x 10(-15)) and 5,988 children aged 7-11 (0.13 Z-score units; P = 1.5 x 10(-8)). In case-control analyses (n = 10,583), the odds for severe childhood obesity reached 1.30 (P = 8.0 x 10(-11)). Furthermore, we observed overtransmission of the risk allele to obese offspring in 660 families (P (pedigree disequilibrium test average; PDT-avg) = 2.4 x 10(-4)). The SNP location and patterns of phenotypic associations are consistent with effects mediated through altered MC4R function. Our findings establish that common variants near MC4R influence fat mass, weight and obesity risk at the population level and reinforce the need for large-scale data integration to identify variants influencing continuous biomedical traits.
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