A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Distribution and medical impact of loss-of-function variants in the Finnish founder population.




AuthorsLim, Würtz, Havulinna, Palta, Tukiainen, Rehnström, Esko, Mägi, Inouye, Lappalainen, Chan, Salem, Lek, Flannick, Sim, Manning, Ladenvall, Bumpstead, Hämäläinen, Aalto, Maksimow, Salmi, Blankenberg, Ardissino, Shah, Horne, McPherson, Hovingh, Reilly, Watkins, Goel, Farrall, Girelli, Reiner, Stitziel, Kathiresan, Gabriel, Barrett, Lehtimäki, Laakso, Groop, Kaprio, Perola, McCarthy, Boehnke, Altshuler, Lindgren, Hirschhorn, Metspalu, Freimer, Zeller, Jalkanen, Koskinen, Raitakari, Durbin, MacArthur, Salomaa, Ripatti, Daly, Palotie, Sequencing Initiative Suomi (SISu) Project

PublisherPUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Publishing placeSAN FRANCISCO

Publication year2014

JournalPLoS Genetics

Journal name in sourcePLoS genetics

Journal acronymPLoS Genet

Article numbere1004494

Volume10

Issue7

Number of pages12

ISSN1553-7404

eISSN1553-7404

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004494


Abstract

Exome sequencing studies in complex diseases are challenged by the allelic heterogeneity, large number and modest effect sizes of associated variants on disease risk and the presence of large numbers of neutral variants, even in phenotypically relevant genes. Isolated populations with recent bottlenecks offer advantages for studying rare variants in complex diseases as they have deleterious variants that are present at higher frequencies as well as a substantial reduction in rare neutral variation. To explore the potential of the Finnish founder population for studying low-frequency (0.5-5%) variants in complex diseases, we compared exome sequence data on 3,000 Finns to the same number of non-Finnish Europeans and discovered that, despite having fewer variable sites overall, the average Finn has more low-frequency loss-of-function variants and complete gene knockouts. We then used several well-characterized Finnish population cohorts to study the phenotypic effects of 83 enriched loss-of-function variants across 60 phenotypes in 36,262 Finns. Using a deep set of quantitative traits collected on these cohorts, we show 5 associations (p<5×10⁻⁸) including splice variants in LPA that lowered plasma lipoprotein(a) levels (P = 1.5×10⁻¹¹⁷). Through accessing the national medical records of these participants, we evaluate the LPA finding via Mendelian randomization and confirm that these splice variants confer protection from cardiovascular disease (OR = 0.84, P = 3×10⁻⁴), demonstrating for the first time the correlation between very low levels of LPA in humans with potential therapeutic implications for cardiovascular diseases. More generally, this study articulates substantial advantages for studying the role of rare variation in complex phenotypes in founder populations like the Finns and by combining a unique population genetic history with data from large population cohorts and centralized research access to National Health Registers.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:06