Hendi Nagham Nafiz, Al-Sarraj Yasser, Ismail Umlai Umm-Kulthum, Suhre Karsten, Nemer Georges, Albagha Omar
Division of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, College of Health and Life Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar.
Division of Genomics and Translational Biomedicine, College of Health and Life Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar.
Front Nutr. 2023 Sep 29;10:1242257. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2023.1242257. eCollection 2023.
Epidemiological studies have consistently revealed that Vitamin D deficiency is most prevalent in Middle Eastern countries. However, research on the impact of genetic loci and polygenic models related to Vitamin D has primarily focused on European populations.
We conducted the first genome-wide association study to identify genetic determinants of Vitamin D levels in Middle Easterners using a whole genome sequencing approach in 6,047 subjects from the Qatar Biobank (QBB) project. We performed a GWAS meta-analysis, combining the QBB cohort with recent European GWAS data from the UK Biobank (involving 345,923 individuals). Additionally, we evaluated the performance of European-derived polygenic risk scores using UK Biobank data in the QBB cohort.
Our study identified an association between a variant in a known locus for the group-specific component gene (), specifically rs2298850 (-value = 1.71 × 10, Beta = -0.1285), and Vitamin D levels. Furthermore, our GWAS meta-analysis identified two novel variants at a known locus on chromosome 11, rs67609747 and rs1945603, that reached the GWAS significance threshold. Notably, we observed a moderately high heritability of Vitamin D, estimated at 18%, compared to Europeans. Despite the lower predictive performance of Vitamin D levels in Qataris compared to Europeans, the European-derived polygenic risk scores exhibited significant links to Vitamin D deficiency risk within the QBB cohort.
This novel study reveals the genetic architecture contributing to Vitamin D deficiency in the Qatari population, emphasizing the genetic heterogeneity across different populations.
流行病学研究一直表明,维生素D缺乏在中东国家最为普遍。然而,关于与维生素D相关的基因位点和多基因模型的影响的研究主要集中在欧洲人群。
我们进行了第一项全基因组关联研究,采用全基因组测序方法,对来自卡塔尔生物样本库(QBB)项目的6047名受试者进行研究,以确定中东人群中维生素D水平的遗传决定因素。我们进行了全基因组关联研究(GWAS)荟萃分析,将QBB队列与来自英国生物样本库的近期欧洲GWAS数据(涉及345923人)相结合。此外,我们使用英国生物样本库的数据在QBB队列中评估了源自欧洲的多基因风险评分的性能。
我们的研究发现,群体特异性成分基因()的一个已知位点的变体,具体为rs2298850(-值 = 1.71 × 10,β = -0.1285),与维生素D水平之间存在关联。此外,我们的GWAS荟萃分析在11号染色体的一个已知位点上确定了两个新的变体,rs67609747和rs1945603,它们达到了GWAS显著性阈值。值得注意的是,与欧洲人相比,我们观察到维生素D的遗传力中等偏高,估计为18%。尽管卡塔尔人维生素D水平的预测性能低于欧洲人,但源自欧洲的多基因风险评分在QBB队列中与维生素D缺乏风险存在显著关联。
这项新研究揭示了卡塔尔人群中导致维生素D缺乏的遗传结构,强调了不同人群之间的遗传异质性。