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Bayesian refinement of association signals for 14 loci in 3 common diseases.

; Maller, Julian B; McVean, Gilean; Byrnes, Jake; Vukcevic, Damjan; Palin, Kimmo; Su, Zhan; Howson, Joanna M M; Auton, Adam; Myers, Simon; Morris, Andrew; Pirinen, Matti; Brown, Matthew A; Burton, Paul R; Caulfield, Mark J; Compston, Alastair; Farrall, Martin; Hall, Alistair S; Hattersley, Andrew T; Hill, Adrian V S; Mathew, Christopher G; Pembrey, Marcus; Satsangi, Jack; Stratton, Michael R; Worthington, Jane; Craddock, Nick; Hurles, Matthew; Ouwehand, Willem; Parkes, Miles; Rahman, Nazneen; Duncanson, Audrey; Todd, John A; Kwiatkowski, Dominic P; Samani, Nilesh J; Gough, Stephen C L; McCarthy, Mark I; Deloukas, Panagiotis; Donnelly, Peter

Nature genetics. 2012;44(12):1294-301.

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Abstract

To further investigate susceptibility loci identified by genome-wide association studies, we genotyped 5,500 SNPs across 14 associated regions in 8,000 samples from a control group and 3 diseases: type 2 diabetes (T2D), coronary artery disease (CAD) and Graves' disease. We defined, using Bayes theorem, credible sets of SNPs that were 95% likely, based on posterior probability, to contain the causal disease-associated SNPs. In 3 of the 14 regions, TCF7L2 (T2D), CTLA4 (Graves' disease) and CDKN2A-CDKN2B (T2D), much of the posterior probability rested on a single SNP, and, in 4 other regions (CDKN2A-CDKN2B (CAD) and CDKAL1, FTO and HHEX (T2D)), the 95% sets were small, thereby excluding most SNPs as potentially causal. Very few SNPs in our credible sets had annotated functions, illustrating the limitations in understanding the mechanisms underlying susceptibility to common diseases. Our results also show the value of more detailed mapping to target sequences for functional studies.

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Place of publication:
United States
Volume:
44
Issue:
12
Pagination:
1294-301
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1038/ng.2435
Pubmed Identifier:
23104008
Pii Identifier:
ng.2435
Access state:
Active

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Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:187477
Created by:
Newman, William
Created:
12th February, 2013, 19:40:35
Last modified by:
Newman, William
Last modified:
10th April, 2013, 20:14:06

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