Uncommon and previously unknown genetic variants that determine how tall a person will be has been identified in a new study.
Uncommon and previously unknown genetic variants that determine how tall a person will be has been identified in a new study. The findings may also provide insight into the genetic architecture of other complex traits.
Although environmental variables can impact attained adult height, it is clear that height is primarily determined by specific alleles that an individual inherits. However, the genetics of height are still not completely understood.
"All of the variants needed to explain height have not yet been identified, and it is likely that the additional genetic variants are uncommon in the population or of very small effect, requiring extremely large samples to be confidently identified," said Hakon Hakonarson from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
To search for genetic variants associated with adult height, researchers performed a complex genetic analysis of more than 100,000 individuals.
"We set out to replicate previous genetic associations with height and to find relevant genomic locations not previously thought to underpin this complex trait," said Brendan Keating, also from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
The authors reported that they identified 64 height-associated variants, two of which would not have been observed without such a large sample size and the inclusion of direct genotyping of uncommon single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).
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These results suggest that genotyping arrays with SNPs that are relatively rare and occur in less than 5 percent of the population have the ability to capture new signals and disease variants that the common SNP arrays missed (i.e., 30 new signals in this study), as long as sample sizes are large enough.
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"The increased power to identify variants of small effect afforded by large sample size and dense genetic coverage including low-frequency SNPs within loci of interest has resulted in the identification of association between previously unreported genetic variants and height," concluded Keating.
The findings were published in the American Journal of Human Genetics.
Source-ANI