@article {1222, title = {Interactions of dietary whole-grain intake with fasting glucose- and insulin-related genetic loci in individuals of European descent: a meta-analysis of 14 cohort studies.}, journal = {Diabetes Care}, volume = {33}, year = {2010}, month = {2010 Dec}, pages = {2684-91}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: Whole-grain foods are touted for multiple health benefits, including enhancing insulin sensitivity and reducing type 2 diabetes risk. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with fasting glucose and insulin concentrations in individuals free of diabetes. We tested the hypothesis that whole-grain food intake and genetic variation interact to influence concentrations of fasting glucose and insulin.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Via meta-analysis of data from 14 cohorts comprising \~{} 48,000 participants of European descent, we studied interactions of whole-grain intake with loci previously associated in GWAS with fasting glucose (16 loci) and/or insulin (2 loci) concentrations. For tests of interaction, we considered a P value <0.0028 (0.05 of 18 tests) as statistically significant.

RESULTS: Greater whole-grain food intake was associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin concentrations independent of demographics, other dietary and lifestyle factors, and BMI (β [95\% CI] per 1-serving-greater whole-grain intake: -0.009 mmol/l glucose [-0.013 to -0.005], P < 0.0001 and -0.011 pmol/l [ln] insulin [-0.015 to -0.007], P = 0.0003). No interactions met our multiple testing-adjusted statistical significance threshold. The strongest SNP interaction with whole-grain intake was rs780094 (GCKR) for fasting insulin (P = 0.006), where greater whole-grain intake was associated with a smaller reduction in fasting insulin concentrations in those with the insulin-raising allele.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results support the favorable association of whole-grain intake with fasting glucose and insulin and suggest a potential interaction between variation in GCKR and whole-grain intake in influencing fasting insulin concentrations.

}, keywords = {Adult, Aged, Blood Glucose, Edible Grain, European Continental Ancestry Group, Fasting, Female, Genetic Loci, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genotype, Humans, Insulin, Male, Middle Aged, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide}, issn = {1935-5548}, doi = {10.2337/dc10-1150}, author = {Nettleton, Jennifer A and McKeown, Nicola M and Kanoni, Stavroula and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Hivert, Marie-France and Ngwa, Julius and van Rooij, Frank J A and Sonestedt, Emily and Wojczynski, Mary K and Ye, Zheng and Tanaka, Tosh and Garcia, Melissa and Anderson, Jennifer S and Follis, Jack L and Djouss{\'e}, Luc and Mukamal, Kenneth and Papoutsakis, Constantina and Mozaffarian, Dariush and Zillikens, M Carola and Bandinelli, Stefania and Bennett, Amanda J and Borecki, Ingrid B and Feitosa, Mary F and Ferrucci, Luigi and Forouhi, Nita G and Groves, Christopher J and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and Harris, Tamara and Hofman, Albert and Houston, Denise K and Hu, Frank B and Johansson, Ingegerd and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Langenberg, Claudia and Launer, Lenore and Liu, Yongmei and Loos, Ruth J and Nalls, Michael and Orho-Melander, Marju and Renstrom, Frida and Rice, Kenneth and Riserus, Ulf and Rolandsson, Olov and Rotter, Jerome I and Saylor, Georgia and Sijbrands, Eric J G and Sjogren, Per and Smith, Albert and Steingr{\'\i}msd{\'o}ttir, Laufey and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Wareham, Nicholas J and Prokopenko, Inga and Pankow, James S and van Duijn, Cornelia M and Florez, Jose C and Witteman, Jacqueline C M and Dupuis, Jos{\'e}e and Dedoussis, George V and Ordovas, Jose M and Ingelsson, Erik and Cupples, L Adrienne and Siscovick, David S and Franks, Paul W and Meigs, James B} } @article {1308, title = {Total zinc intake may modify the glucose-raising effect of a zinc transporter (SLC30A8) variant: a 14-cohort meta-analysis.}, journal = {Diabetes}, volume = {60}, year = {2011}, month = {2011 Sep}, pages = {2407-16}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: Many genetic variants have been associated with glucose homeostasis and type 2 diabetes in genome-wide association studies. Zinc is an essential micronutrient that is important for β-cell function and glucose homeostasis. We tested the hypothesis that zinc intake could influence the glucose-raising effect of specific variants.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We conducted a 14-cohort meta-analysis to assess the interaction of 20 genetic variants known to be related to glycemic traits and zinc metabolism with dietary zinc intake (food sources) and a 5-cohort meta-analysis to assess the interaction with total zinc intake (food sources and supplements) on fasting glucose levels among individuals of European ancestry without diabetes.

RESULTS: We observed a significant association of total zinc intake with lower fasting glucose levels (β-coefficient {\textpm} SE per 1 mg/day of zinc intake: -0.0012 {\textpm} 0.0003 mmol/L, summary P value = 0.0003), while the association of dietary zinc intake was not significant. We identified a nominally significant interaction between total zinc intake and the SLC30A8 rs11558471 variant on fasting glucose levels (β-coefficient {\textpm} SE per A allele for 1 mg/day of greater total zinc intake: -0.0017 {\textpm} 0.0006 mmol/L, summary interaction P value = 0.005); this result suggests a stronger inverse association between total zinc intake and fasting glucose in individuals carrying the glucose-raising A allele compared with individuals who do not carry it. None of the other interaction tests were statistically significant.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that higher total zinc intake may attenuate the glucose-raising effect of the rs11558471 SLC30A8 (zinc transporter) variant. Our findings also support evidence for the association of higher total zinc intake with lower fasting glucose levels.

}, keywords = {Blood Glucose, Cation Transport Proteins, Cohort Studies, Humans, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Zinc, Zinc Transporter 8}, issn = {1939-327X}, doi = {10.2337/db11-0176}, author = {Kanoni, Stavroula and Nettleton, Jennifer A and Hivert, Marie-France and Ye, Zheng and van Rooij, Frank J A and Shungin, Dmitry and Sonestedt, Emily and Ngwa, Julius S and Wojczynski, Mary K and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Gustafsson, Stefan and Anderson, Jennifer S and Tanaka, Toshiko and Hindy, George and Saylor, Georgia and Renstrom, Frida and Bennett, Amanda J and van Duijn, Cornelia M and Florez, Jose C and Fox, Caroline S and Hofman, Albert and Hoogeveen, Ron C and Houston, Denise K and Hu, Frank B and Jacques, Paul F and Johansson, Ingegerd and Lind, Lars and Liu, Yongmei and McKeown, Nicola and Ordovas, Jose and Pankow, James S and Sijbrands, Eric J G and Syv{\"a}nen, Ann-Christine and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Yannakoulia, Mary and Zillikens, M Carola and Wareham, Nick J and Prokopenko, Inga and Bandinelli, Stefania and Forouhi, Nita G and Cupples, L Adrienne and Loos, Ruth J and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and Dupuis, Jos{\'e}e and Langenberg, Claudia and Ferrucci, Luigi and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and McCarthy, Mark I and Ingelsson, Erik and Borecki, Ingrid B and Witteman, Jacqueline C M and Orho-Melander, Marju and Siscovick, David S and Meigs, James B and Franks, Paul W and Dedoussis, George V} } @article {6163, title = {Genome-wide meta-analysis of observational studies shows common genetic variants associated with macronutrient intake.}, journal = {Am J Clin Nutr}, volume = {97}, year = {2013}, month = {2013 Jun}, pages = {1395-402}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Macronutrient intake varies substantially between individuals, and there is evidence that this variation is partly accounted for by genetic variants.

OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to identify common genetic variants that are associated with macronutrient intake.

DESIGN: We performed 2-stage genome-wide association (GWA) meta-analysis of macronutrient intake in populations of European descent. Macronutrients were assessed by using food-frequency questionnaires and analyzed as percentages of total energy consumption from total fat, protein, and carbohydrate. From the discovery GWA (n = 38,360), 35 independent loci associated with macronutrient intake at P < 5 {\texttimes} 10(-6) were identified and taken forward to replication in 3 additional cohorts (n = 33,533) from the DietGen Consortium. For one locus, fat mass obesity-associated protein (FTO), cohorts with Illumina MetaboChip genotype data (n = 7724) provided additional replication data.

RESULTS: A variant in the chromosome 19 locus (rs838145) was associated with higher carbohydrate (β {\textpm} SE: 0.25 {\textpm} 0.04\%; P = 1.68 {\texttimes} 10(-8)) and lower fat (β {\textpm} SE: -0.21 {\textpm} 0.04\%; P = 1.57 {\texttimes} 10(-9)) consumption. A candidate gene in this region, fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), encodes a fibroblast growth factor involved in glucose and lipid metabolism. The variants in this locus were associated with circulating FGF21 protein concentrations (P < 0.05) but not mRNA concentrations in blood or brain. The body mass index (BMI)-increasing allele of the FTO variant (rs1421085) was associated with higher protein intake (β {\textpm} SE: 0.10 {\textpm} 0.02\%; P = 9.96 {\texttimes} 10(-10)), independent of BMI (after adjustment for BMI, β {\textpm} SE: 0.08 {\textpm} 0.02\%; P = 3.15 {\texttimes} 10(-7)).

CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that variants in genes involved in nutrient metabolism and obesity are associated with macronutrient consumption in humans. Trials related to this study were registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00005131 (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities), NCT00005133 (Cardiovascular Health Study), NCT00005136 (Family Heart Study), NCT00005121 (Framingham Heart Study), NCT00083369 (Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Triglycerides), NCT01331512 (InCHIANTI Study), and NCT00005487 (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis).

}, keywords = {Alleles, Atherosclerosis, Body Mass Index, Dietary Carbohydrates, Dietary Fats, Dietary Proteins, Energy Intake, European Continental Ancestry Group, Fibroblast Growth Factors, Follow-Up Studies, Gene-Environment Interaction, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genome-Wide Association Study, Genotype, Humans, Life Style, Obesity, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Prospective Studies, Quantitative Trait Loci, Surveys and Questionnaires}, issn = {1938-3207}, doi = {10.3945/ajcn.112.052183}, author = {Tanaka, Toshiko and Ngwa, Julius S and van Rooij, Frank J A and Zillikens, M Carola and Wojczynski, Mary K and Frazier-Wood, Alexis C and Houston, Denise K and Kanoni, Stavroula and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Luan, Jian{\textquoteright}an and Mikkil{\"a}, Vera and Renstrom, Frida and Sonestedt, Emily and Zhao, Jing Hua and Chu, Audrey Y and Qi, Lu and Chasman, Daniel I and de Oliveira Otto, Marcia C and Dhurandhar, Emily J and Feitosa, Mary F and Johansson, Ingegerd and Khaw, Kay-Tee and Lohman, Kurt K and Manichaikul, Ani and McKeown, Nicola M and Mozaffarian, Dariush and Singleton, Andrew and Stirrups, Kathleen and Viikari, Jorma and Ye, Zheng and Bandinelli, Stefania and Barroso, In{\^e}s and Deloukas, Panos and Forouhi, Nita G and Hofman, Albert and Liu, Yongmei and Lyytik{\"a}inen, Leo-Pekka and North, Kari E and Dimitriou, Maria and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Langenberg, Claudia and Ordovas, Jose M and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Hu, Frank B and Kalafati, Ioanna-Panagiota and Raitakari, Olli and Franco, Oscar H and Johnson, Andrew and Emilsson, Valur and Schrack, Jennifer A and Semba, Richard D and Siscovick, David S and Arnett, Donna K and Borecki, Ingrid B and Franks, Paul W and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Loos, Ruth J F and Orho-Melander, Marju and Rotter, Jerome I and Wareham, Nicholas J and Witteman, Jacqueline C M and Ferrucci, Luigi and Dedoussis, George and Cupples, L Adrienne and Nettleton, Jennifer A} } @article {5879, title = {Higher magnesium intake is associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin, with no evidence of interaction with select genetic loci, in a meta-analysis of 15 CHARGE Consortium Studies.}, journal = {J Nutr}, volume = {143}, year = {2013}, month = {2013 Mar}, pages = {345-53}, abstract = {

Favorable associations between magnesium intake and glycemic traits, such as fasting glucose and insulin, are observed in observational and clinical studies, but whether genetic variation affects these associations is largely unknown. We hypothesized that single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with either glycemic traits or magnesium metabolism affect the association between magnesium intake and fasting glucose and insulin. Fifteen studies from the CHARGE (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology) Consortium provided data from up to 52,684 participants of European descent without known diabetes. In fixed-effects meta-analyses, we quantified 1) cross-sectional associations of dietary magnesium intake with fasting glucose (mmol/L) and insulin (ln-pmol/L) and 2) interactions between magnesium intake and SNPs related to fasting glucose (16 SNPs), insulin (2 SNPs), or magnesium (8 SNPs) on fasting glucose and insulin. After adjustment for age, sex, energy intake, BMI, and behavioral risk factors, magnesium (per 50-mg/d increment) was inversely associated with fasting glucose [β = -0.009 mmol/L (95\% CI: -0.013, -0.005), P < 0.0001] and insulin [-0.020 ln-pmol/L (95\% CI: -0.024, -0.017), P < 0.0001]. No magnesium-related SNP or interaction between any SNP and magnesium reached significance after correction for multiple testing. However, rs2274924 in magnesium transporter-encoding TRPM6 showed a nominal association (uncorrected P = 0.03) with glucose, and rs11558471 in SLC30A8 and rs3740393 near CNNM2 showed a nominal interaction (uncorrected, both P = 0.02) with magnesium on glucose. Consistent with other studies, a higher magnesium intake was associated with lower fasting glucose and insulin. Nominal evidence of TRPM6 influence and magnesium interaction with select loci suggests that further investigation is warranted.

}, keywords = {Blood Glucose, Female, Genetic Loci, Humans, Insulin, Magnesium, Male, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Trace Elements, TRPM Cation Channels}, issn = {1541-6100}, doi = {10.3945/jn.112.172049}, author = {Hruby, Adela and Ngwa, Julius S and Renstrom, Frida and Wojczynski, Mary K and Ganna, Andrea and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and Houston, Denise K and Jacques, Paul F and Kanoni, Stavroula and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Manichaikul, Ani and North, Kari E and Ntalla, Ioanna and Sonestedt, Emily and Tanaka, Toshiko and van Rooij, Frank J A and Bandinelli, Stefania and Djouss{\'e}, Luc and Grigoriou, Efi and Johansson, Ingegerd and Lohman, Kurt K and Pankow, James S and Raitakari, Olli T and Riserus, Ulf and Yannakoulia, Mary and Zillikens, M Carola and Hassanali, Neelam and Liu, Yongmei and Mozaffarian, Dariush and Papoutsakis, Constantina and Syv{\"a}nen, Ann-Christine and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Viikari, Jorma and Groves, Christopher J and Hofman, Albert and Lind, Lars and McCarthy, Mark I and Mikkil{\"a}, Vera and Mukamal, Kenneth and Franco, Oscar H and Borecki, Ingrid B and Cupples, L Adrienne and Dedoussis, George V and Ferrucci, Luigi and Hu, Frank B and Ingelsson, Erik and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Kao, W H Linda and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Orho-Melander, Marju and Prokopenko, Inga and Rotter, Jerome I and Siscovick, David S and Witteman, Jacqueline C M and Franks, Paul W and Meigs, James B and McKeown, Nicola M and Nettleton, Jennifer A} } @article {6938, title = {FTO genetic variants, dietary intake and body mass index: insights from 177,330 individuals.}, journal = {Hum Mol Genet}, volume = {23}, year = {2014}, month = {2014 Dec 20}, pages = {6961-72}, abstract = {

FTO is the strongest known genetic susceptibility locus for obesity. Experimental studies in animals suggest the potential roles of FTO in regulating food intake. The interactive relation among FTO variants, dietary intake and body mass index (BMI) is complex and results from previous often small-scale studies in humans are highly inconsistent. We performed large-scale analyses based on data from 177,330 adults (154 439 Whites, 5776 African Americans and 17 115 Asians) from 40 studies to examine: (i) the association between the FTO-rs9939609 variant (or a proxy single-nucleotide polymorphism) and total energy and macronutrient intake and (ii) the interaction between the FTO variant and dietary intake on BMI. The minor allele (A-allele) of the FTO-rs9939609 variant was associated with higher BMI in Whites (effect per allele = 0.34 [0.31, 0.37] kg/m(2), P = 1.9 {\texttimes} 10(-105)), and all participants (0.30 [0.30, 0.35] kg/m(2), P = 3.6 {\texttimes} 10(-107)). The BMI-increasing allele of the FTO variant showed a significant association with higher dietary protein intake (effect per allele = 0.08 [0.06, 0.10] \%, P = 2.4 {\texttimes} 10(-16)), and relative weak associations with lower total energy intake (-6.4 [-10.1, -2.6] kcal/day, P = 0.001) and lower dietary carbohydrate intake (-0.07 [-0.11, -0.02] \%, P = 0.004). The associations with protein (P = 7.5 {\texttimes} 10(-9)) and total energy (P = 0.002) were attenuated but remained significant after adjustment for BMI. We did not find significant interactions between the FTO variant and dietary intake of total energy, protein, carbohydrate or fat on BMI. Our findings suggest a positive association between the BMI-increasing allele of FTO variant and higher dietary protein intake and offer insight into potential link between FTO, dietary protein intake and adiposity.

}, keywords = {Adult, African Americans, Aged, Alleles, Asian Continental Ancestry Group, Body Mass Index, Dietary Carbohydrates, Dietary Fats, Dietary Proteins, Energy Intake, European Continental Ancestry Group, Female, Gene Frequency, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Proteins}, issn = {1460-2083}, doi = {10.1093/hmg/ddu411}, author = {Qi, Qibin and Kilpel{\"a}inen, Tuomas O and Downer, Mary K and Tanaka, Toshiko and Smith, Caren E and Sluijs, Ivonne and Sonestedt, Emily and Chu, Audrey Y and Renstrom, Frida and Lin, Xiaochen and {\"A}ngquist, Lars H and Huang, Jinyan and Liu, Zhonghua and Li, Yanping and Asif Ali, Muhammad and Xu, Min and Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh and Boer, Jolanda M A and Chen, Peng and Daimon, Makoto and Eriksson, Johan and Perola, Markus and Friedlander, Yechiel and Gao, Yu-Tang and Heppe, Denise H M and Holloway, John W and Houston, Denise K and Kanoni, Stavroula and Kim, Yu-Mi and Laaksonen, Maarit A and J{\"a}{\"a}skel{\"a}inen, Tiina and Lee, Nanette R and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Lu, Wei and Luben, Robert N and Manichaikul, Ani and M{\"a}nnist{\"o}, Satu and Marques-Vidal, Pedro and Monda, Keri L and Ngwa, Julius S and Perusse, Louis and van Rooij, Frank J A and Xiang, Yong-Bing and Wen, Wanqing and Wojczynski, Mary K and Zhu, Jingwen and Borecki, Ingrid B and Bouchard, Claude and Cai, Qiuyin and Cooper, Cyrus and Dedoussis, George V and Deloukas, Panos and Ferrucci, Luigi and Forouhi, Nita G and Hansen, Torben and Christiansen, Lene and Hofman, Albert and Johansson, Ingegerd and J{\o}rgensen, Torben and Karasawa, Shigeru and Khaw, Kay-Tee and Kim, Mi-Kyung and Kristiansson, Kati and Li, Huaixing and Lin, Xu and Liu, Yongmei and Lohman, Kurt K and Long, Jirong and Mikkil{\"a}, Vera and Mozaffarian, Dariush and North, Kari and Pedersen, Oluf and Raitakari, Olli and Rissanen, Harri and Tuomilehto, Jaakko and van der Schouw, Yvonne T and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Zillikens, M Carola and Franco, Oscar H and Shyong Tai, E and Ou Shu, Xiao and Siscovick, David S and Toft, Ulla and Verschuren, W M Monique and Vollenweider, Peter and Wareham, Nicholas J and Witteman, Jacqueline C M and Zheng, Wei and Ridker, Paul M and Kang, Jae H and Liang, Liming and Jensen, Majken K and Curhan, Gary C and Pasquale, Louis R and Hunter, David J and Mohlke, Karen L and Uusitupa, Matti and Cupples, L Adrienne and Rankinen, Tuomo and Orho-Melander, Marju and Wang, Tao and Chasman, Daniel I and Franks, Paul W and S{\o}rensen, Thorkild I A and Hu, Frank B and Loos, Ruth J F and Nettleton, Jennifer A and Qi, Lu} } @article {6844, title = {Consumption of meat is associated with higher fasting glucose and insulin concentrations regardless of glucose and insulin genetic risk scores: a meta-analysis of 50,345 Caucasians.}, journal = {Am J Clin Nutr}, volume = {102}, year = {2015}, month = {2015 Nov}, pages = {1266-78}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Recent studies suggest that meat intake is associated with diabetes-related phenotypes. However, whether the associations of meat intake and glucose and insulin homeostasis are modified by genes related to glucose and insulin is unknown.

OBJECTIVE: We investigated the associations of meat intake and the interaction of meat with genotype on fasting glucose and insulin concentrations in Caucasians free of diabetes mellitus.

DESIGN: Fourteen studies that are part of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium participated in the analysis. Data were provided for up to 50,345 participants. Using linear regression within studies and a fixed-effects meta-analysis across studies, we examined 1) the associations of processed meat and unprocessed red meat intake with fasting glucose and insulin concentrations; and 2) the interactions of processed meat and unprocessed red meat with genetic risk score related to fasting glucose or insulin resistance on fasting glucose and insulin concentrations.

RESULTS: Processed meat was associated with higher fasting glucose, and unprocessed red meat was associated with both higher fasting glucose and fasting insulin concentrations after adjustment for potential confounders [not including body mass index (BMI)]. For every additional 50-g serving of processed meat per day, fasting glucose was 0.021 mmol/L (95\% CI: 0.011, 0.030 mmol/L) higher. Every additional 100-g serving of unprocessed red meat per day was associated with a 0.037-mmol/L (95\% CI: 0.023, 0.051-mmol/L) higher fasting glucose concentration and a 0.049-ln-pmol/L (95\% CI: 0.035, 0.063-ln-pmol/L) higher fasting insulin concentration. After additional adjustment for BMI, observed associations were attenuated and no longer statistically significant. The association of processed meat and fasting insulin did not reach statistical significance after correction for multiple comparisons. Observed associations were not modified by genetic loci known to influence fasting glucose or insulin resistance.

CONCLUSION: The association of higher fasting glucose and insulin concentrations with meat consumption was not modified by an index of glucose- and insulin-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms. Six of the participating studies are registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT0000513 (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities), NCT00149435 (Cardiovascular Health Study), NCT00005136 (Family Heart Study), NCT00005121 (Framingham Heart Study), NCT00083369 (Genetics of Lipid Lowering Drugs and Diet Network), and NCT00005487 (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis).

}, keywords = {Blood Glucose, Cohort Studies, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Hyperglycemia, Hyperinsulinism, Insulin, Insulin Resistance, Insulin-Secreting Cells, Meat, Meat Products, Middle Aged, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Risk Factors}, issn = {1938-3207}, doi = {10.3945/ajcn.114.101238}, author = {Fretts, Amanda M and Follis, Jack L and Nettleton, Jennifer A and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Ngwa, Julius S and Wojczynski, Mary K and Kalafati, Ioanna Panagiota and Varga, Tibor V and Frazier-Wood, Alexis C and Houston, Denise K and Lahti, Jari and Ericson, Ulrika and van den Hooven, Edith H and Mikkil{\"a}, Vera and Kiefte-de Jong, Jessica C and Mozaffarian, Dariush and Rice, Kenneth and Renstrom, Frida and North, Kari E and McKeown, Nicola M and Feitosa, Mary F and Kanoni, Stavroula and Smith, Caren E and Garcia, Melissa E and Tiainen, Anna-Maija and Sonestedt, Emily and Manichaikul, Ani and van Rooij, Frank J A and Dimitriou, Maria and Raitakari, Olli and Pankow, James S and Djouss{\'e}, Luc and Province, Michael A and Hu, Frank B and Lai, Chao-Qiang and Keller, Margaux F and Per{\"a}l{\"a}, Mia-Maria and Rotter, Jerome I and Hofman, Albert and Graff, Misa and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Mukamal, Kenneth and Johansson, Ingegerd and Ordovas, Jose M and Liu, Yongmei and M{\"a}nnist{\"o}, Satu and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Deloukas, Panos and Sepp{\"a}l{\"a}, Ilkka and Psaty, Bruce M and Cupples, L Adrienne and Borecki, Ingrid B and Franks, Paul W and Arnett, Donna K and Nalls, Mike A and Eriksson, Johan G and Orho-Melander, Marju and Franco, Oscar H and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Dedoussis, George V and Meigs, James B and Siscovick, David S} } @article {6802, title = {Gene {\texttimes} dietary pattern interactions in obesity: analysis of up to 68 317 adults of European ancestry.}, journal = {Hum Mol Genet}, volume = {24}, year = {2015}, month = {2015 Aug 15}, pages = {4728-38}, abstract = {

Obesity is highly heritable. Genetic variants showing robust associations with obesity traits have been identified through genome-wide association studies. We investigated whether a composite score representing healthy diet modifies associations of these variants with obesity traits. Totally, 32 body mass index (BMI)- and 14 waist-hip ratio (WHR)-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms were genotyped, and genetic risk scores (GRS) were calculated in 18 cohorts of European ancestry (n = 68 317). Diet score was calculated based on self-reported intakes of whole grains, fish, fruits, vegetables, nuts/seeds (favorable) and red/processed meats, sweets, sugar-sweetened beverages and fried potatoes (unfavorable). Multivariable adjusted, linear regression within each cohort followed by inverse variance-weighted, fixed-effects meta-analysis was used to characterize: (a) associations of each GRS with BMI and BMI-adjusted WHR~and (b) diet score modification of genetic associations with BMI and BMI-adjusted WHR. Nominally significant interactions (P = 0.006-0.04) were observed between the diet score and WHR-GRS (but not BMI-GRS), two WHR loci (GRB14 rs10195252; LYPLAL1 rs4846567) and two BMI loci (LRRN6C rs10968576; MTIF3 rs4771122), for the respective BMI-adjusted WHR or BMI outcomes. Although the magnitudes of these select interactions were small, our data indicated that associations between genetic predisposition and obesity traits were stronger with a healthier diet. Our findings generate interesting hypotheses; however, experimental and functional studies are needed to determine their clinical relevance.

}, keywords = {Adult, Body Mass Index, Case-Control Studies, Diet, Western, Epistasis, Genetic, European Continental Ancestry Group, Female, Genetic Loci, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Male, Obesity, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide}, issn = {1460-2083}, doi = {10.1093/hmg/ddv186}, author = {Nettleton, Jennifer A and Follis, Jack L and Ngwa, Julius S and Smith, Caren E and Ahmad, Shafqat and Tanaka, Toshiko and Wojczynski, Mary K and Voortman, Trudy and Lemaitre, Rozenn N and Kristiansson, Kati and Nuotio, Marja-Liisa and Houston, Denise K and Per{\"a}l{\"a}, Mia-Maria and Qi, Qibin and Sonestedt, Emily and Manichaikul, Ani and Kanoni, Stavroula and Ganna, Andrea and Mikkil{\"a}, Vera and North, Kari E and Siscovick, David S and Harald, Kennet and McKeown, Nicola M and Johansson, Ingegerd and Rissanen, Harri and Liu, Yongmei and Lahti, Jari and Hu, Frank B and Bandinelli, Stefania and Rukh, Gull and Rich, Stephen and Booij, Lisanne and Dmitriou, Maria and Ax, Erika and Raitakari, Olli and Mukamal, Kenneth and M{\"a}nnist{\"o}, Satu and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and Jula, Antti and Ericson, Ulrika and Jacobs, David R and van Rooij, Frank J A and Deloukas, Panos and Sjogren, Per and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Djouss{\'e}, Luc and Perola, Markus and Barroso, In{\^e}s and Hofman, Albert and Stirrups, Kathleen and Viikari, Jorma and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Kalafati, Ioanna P and Franco, Oscar H and Mozaffarian, Dariush and Salomaa, Veikko and Borecki, Ingrid B and Knekt, Paul and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Eriksson, Johan G and Dedoussis, George V and Qi, Lu and Ferrucci, Luigi and Orho-Melander, Marju and Zillikens, M Carola and Ingelsson, Erik and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Renstrom, Frida and Cupples, L Adrienne and Loos, Ruth J F and Franks, Paul W} } @article {6686, title = {Low-frequency and rare exome chip variants associate with fasting glucose and type 2 diabetes susceptibility.}, journal = {Nat Commun}, volume = {6}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {5897}, abstract = {

Fasting glucose and insulin are intermediate traits for type 2 diabetes. Here we explore the role of coding variation on these traits by analysis of variants on the HumanExome BeadChip in 60,564 non-diabetic individuals and in 16,491 T2D cases and 81,877 controls. We identify a novel association of a low-frequency nonsynonymous SNV in GLP1R (A316T; rs10305492; MAF=1.4\%) with lower FG (β=-0.09{\textpm}0.01 mmol l(-1), P=3.4 {\texttimes} 10(-12)), T2D risk (OR[95\%CI]=0.86[0.76-0.96], P=0.010), early insulin secretion (β=-0.07{\textpm}0.035 pmolinsulin mmolglucose(-1), P=0.048), but higher 2-h glucose (β=0.16{\textpm}0.05 mmol l(-1), P=4.3 {\texttimes} 10(-4)). We identify a gene-based association with FG at G6PC2 (pSKAT=6.8 {\texttimes} 10(-6)) driven by four rare protein-coding SNVs (H177Y, Y207S, R283X and S324P). We identify rs651007 (MAF=20\%) in the first intron of ABO at the putative promoter of an antisense lncRNA, associating with higher FG (β=0.02{\textpm}0.004 mmol l(-1), P=1.3 {\texttimes} 10(-8)). Our approach identifies novel coding variant associations and extends the allelic spectrum of variation underlying diabetes-related quantitative traits and T2D susceptibility.

}, keywords = {African Continental Ancestry Group, Blood Glucose, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, European Continental Ancestry Group, Exome, Fasting, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Loci, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor, Glucose-6-Phosphatase, Humans, Insulin, Mutation Rate, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms6897}, author = {Wessel, Jennifer and Chu, Audrey Y and Willems, Sara M and Wang, Shuai and Yaghootkar, Hanieh and Brody, Jennifer A and Dauriz, Marco and Hivert, Marie-France and Raghavan, Sridharan and Lipovich, Leonard and Hidalgo, Bertha and Fox, Keolu and Huffman, Jennifer E and An, Ping and Lu, Yingchang and Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J and Grarup, Niels and Ehm, Margaret G and Li, Li and Baldridge, Abigail S and Stan{\v c}{\'a}kov{\'a}, Alena and Abrol, Ravinder and Besse, C{\'e}line and Boland, Anne and Bork-Jensen, Jette and Fornage, Myriam and Freitag, Daniel F and Garcia, Melissa E and Guo, Xiuqing and Hara, Kazuo and Isaacs, Aaron and Jakobsdottir, Johanna and Lange, Leslie A and Layton, Jill C and Li, Man and Hua Zhao, Jing and Meidtner, Karina and Morrison, Alanna C and Nalls, Mike A and Peters, Marjolein J and Sabater-Lleal, Maria and Schurmann, Claudia and Silveira, Angela and Smith, Albert V and Southam, Lorraine and Stoiber, Marcus H and Strawbridge, Rona J and Taylor, Kent D and Varga, Tibor V and Allin, Kristine H and Amin, Najaf and Aponte, Jennifer L and Aung, Tin and Barbieri, Caterina and Bihlmeyer, Nathan A and Boehnke, Michael and Bombieri, Cristina and Bowden, Donald W and Burns, Sean M and Chen, Yuning and Chen, Yii-DerI and Cheng, Ching-Yu and Correa, Adolfo and Czajkowski, Jacek and Dehghan, Abbas and Ehret, Georg B and Eiriksdottir, Gudny and Escher, Stefan A and Farmaki, Aliki-Eleni and Fr{\r a}nberg, Mattias and Gambaro, Giovanni and Giulianini, Franco and Goddard, William A and Goel, Anuj and Gottesman, Omri and Grove, Megan L and Gustafsson, Stefan and Hai, Yang and Hallmans, G{\"o}ran and Heo, Jiyoung and Hoffmann, Per and Ikram, Mohammad K and Jensen, Richard A and J{\o}rgensen, Marit E and J{\o}rgensen, Torben and Karaleftheri, Maria and Khor, Chiea C and Kirkpatrick, Andrea and Kraja, Aldi T and Kuusisto, Johanna and Lange, Ethan M and Lee, I T and Lee, Wen-Jane and Leong, Aaron and Liao, Jiemin and Liu, Chunyu and Liu, Yongmei and Lindgren, Cecilia M and Linneberg, Allan and Malerba, Giovanni and Mamakou, Vasiliki and Marouli, Eirini and Maruthur, Nisa M and Matchan, Angela and McKean-Cowdin, Roberta and McLeod, Olga and Metcalf, Ginger A and Mohlke, Karen L and Muzny, Donna M and Ntalla, Ioanna and Palmer, Nicholette D and Pasko, Dorota and Peter, Andreas and Rayner, Nigel W and Renstrom, Frida and Rice, Ken and Sala, Cinzia F and Sennblad, Bengt and Serafetinidis, Ioannis and Smith, Jennifer A and Soranzo, Nicole and Speliotes, Elizabeth K and Stahl, Eli A and Stirrups, Kathleen and Tentolouris, Nikos and Thanopoulou, Anastasia and Torres, Mina and Traglia, Michela and Tsafantakis, Emmanouil and Javad, Sundas and Yanek, Lisa R and Zengini, Eleni and Becker, Diane M and Bis, Joshua C and Brown, James B and Cupples, L Adrienne and Hansen, Torben and Ingelsson, Erik and Karter, Andrew J and Lorenzo, Carlos and Mathias, Rasika A and Norris, Jill M and Peloso, Gina M and Sheu, Wayne H-H and Toniolo, Daniela and Vaidya, Dhananjay and Varma, Rohit and Wagenknecht, Lynne E and Boeing, Heiner and Bottinger, Erwin P and Dedoussis, George and Deloukas, Panos and Ferrannini, Ele and Franco, Oscar H and Franks, Paul W and Gibbs, Richard A and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Hamsten, Anders and Harris, Tamara B and Hattersley, Andrew T and Hayward, Caroline and Hofman, Albert and Jansson, Jan-H{\r a}kan and Langenberg, Claudia and Launer, Lenore J and Levy, Daniel and Oostra, Ben A and O{\textquoteright}Donnell, Christopher J and O{\textquoteright}Rahilly, Stephen and Padmanabhan, Sandosh and Pankow, James S and Polasek, Ozren and Province, Michael A and Rich, Stephen S and Ridker, Paul M and Rudan, Igor and Schulze, Matthias B and Smith, Blair H and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Walker, Mark and Watkins, Hugh and Wong, Tien Y and Zeggini, Eleftheria and Laakso, Markku and Borecki, Ingrid B and Chasman, Daniel I and Pedersen, Oluf and Psaty, Bruce M and Tai, E Shyong and van Duijn, Cornelia M and Wareham, Nicholas J and Waterworth, Dawn M and Boerwinkle, Eric and Kao, W H Linda and Florez, Jose C and Loos, Ruth J F and Wilson, James G and Frayling, Timothy M and Siscovick, David S and Dupuis, Jos{\'e}e and Rotter, Jerome I and Meigs, James B and Scott, Robert A and Goodarzi, Mark O} } @article {7573, title = {Exome-wide association study of plasma lipids in >300,000 individuals.}, journal = {Nat Genet}, volume = {49}, year = {2017}, month = {2017 Dec}, pages = {1758-1766}, abstract = {

We screened variants on an exome-focused genotyping array in >300,000 participants (replication in >280,000 participants) and identified 444 independent variants in 250 loci significantly associated with total cholesterol (TC), high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and/or triglycerides (TG). At two loci (JAK2 and A1CF), experimental analysis in mice showed lipid changes consistent with the human data. We also found that: (i) beta-thalassemia trait carriers displayed lower TC and were protected from coronary artery disease (CAD); (ii) excluding the CETP locus, there was not a predictable relationship between plasma HDL-C and risk for age-related macular degeneration; (iii) only some mechanisms of lowering LDL-C appeared to increase risk for type 2 diabetes (T2D); and (iv) TG-lowering alleles involved in hepatic production of TG-rich lipoproteins (TM6SF2 and PNPLA3) tracked with higher liver fat, higher risk for T2D, and lower risk for CAD, whereas TG-lowering alleles involved in peripheral lipolysis (LPL and ANGPTL4) had no effect on liver fat but decreased risks for both T2D and CAD.

}, keywords = {Coronary Artery Disease, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Exome, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Genotype, Humans, Lipids, Macular Degeneration, Phenotype, Risk Factors}, issn = {1546-1718}, doi = {10.1038/ng.3977}, author = {Liu, Dajiang J and Peloso, Gina M and Yu, Haojie and Butterworth, Adam S and Wang, Xiao and Mahajan, Anubha and Saleheen, Danish and Emdin, Connor and Alam, Dewan and Alves, Alexessander Couto and Amouyel, Philippe and Di Angelantonio, Emanuele and Arveiler, Dominique and Assimes, Themistocles L and Auer, Paul L and Baber, Usman and Ballantyne, Christie M and Bang, Lia E and Benn, Marianne and Bis, Joshua C and Boehnke, Michael and Boerwinkle, Eric and Bork-Jensen, Jette and Bottinger, Erwin P and Brandslund, Ivan and Brown, Morris and Busonero, Fabio and Caulfield, Mark J and Chambers, John C and Chasman, Daniel I and Chen, Y Eugene and Chen, Yii-Der Ida and Chowdhury, Rajiv and Christensen, Cramer and Chu, Audrey Y and Connell, John M and Cucca, Francesco and Cupples, L Adrienne and Damrauer, Scott M and Davies, Gail and Deary, Ian J and Dedoussis, George and Denny, Joshua C and Dominiczak, Anna and Dub{\'e}, Marie-Pierre and Ebeling, Tapani and Eiriksdottir, Gudny and Esko, T{\~o}nu and Farmaki, Aliki-Eleni and Feitosa, Mary F and Ferrario, Marco and Ferrieres, Jean and Ford, Ian and Fornage, Myriam and Franks, Paul W and Frayling, Timothy M and Frikke-Schmidt, Ruth and Fritsche, Lars G and Frossard, Philippe and Fuster, Valentin and Ganesh, Santhi K and Gao, Wei and Garcia, Melissa E and Gieger, Christian and Giulianini, Franco and Goodarzi, Mark O and Grallert, Harald and Grarup, Niels and Groop, Leif and Grove, Megan L and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Hansen, Torben and Harris, Tamara B and Hayward, Caroline and Hirschhorn, Joel N and Holmen, Oddgeir L and Huffman, Jennifer and Huo, Yong and Hveem, Kristian and Jabeen, Sehrish and Jackson, Anne U and Jakobsdottir, Johanna and Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta and Jensen, Gorm B and J{\o}rgensen, Marit E and Jukema, J Wouter and Justesen, Johanne M and Kamstrup, Pia R and Kanoni, Stavroula and Karpe, Fredrik and Kee, Frank and Khera, Amit V and Klarin, Derek and Koistinen, Heikki A and Kooner, Jaspal S and Kooperberg, Charles and Kuulasmaa, Kari and Kuusisto, Johanna and Laakso, Markku and Lakka, Timo and Langenberg, Claudia and Langsted, Anne and Launer, Lenore J and Lauritzen, Torsten and Liewald, David C M and Lin, Li An and Linneberg, Allan and Loos, Ruth J F and Lu, Yingchang and Lu, Xiangfeng and M{\"a}gi, Reedik and M{\"a}larstig, Anders and Manichaikul, Ani and Manning, Alisa K and M{\"a}ntyselk{\"a}, Pekka and Marouli, Eirini and Masca, Nicholas G D and Maschio, Andrea and Meigs, James B and Melander, Olle and Metspalu, Andres and Morris, Andrew P and Morrison, Alanna C and Mulas, Antonella and M{\"u}ller-Nurasyid, Martina and Munroe, Patricia B and Neville, Matt J and Nielsen, Jonas B and Nielsen, Sune F and Nordestgaard, B{\o}rge G and Ordovas, Jose M and Mehran, Roxana and O{\textquoteright}Donnell, Christoper J and Orho-Melander, Marju and Molony, Cliona M and Muntendam, Pieter and Padmanabhan, Sandosh and Palmer, Colin N A and Pasko, Dorota and Patel, Aniruddh P and Pedersen, Oluf and Perola, Markus and Peters, Annette and Pisinger, Charlotta and Pistis, Giorgio and Polasek, Ozren and Poulter, Neil and Psaty, Bruce M and Rader, Daniel J and Rasheed, Asif and Rauramaa, Rainer and Reilly, Dermot F and Reiner, Alex P and Renstrom, Frida and Rich, Stephen S and Ridker, Paul M and Rioux, John D and Robertson, Neil R and Roden, Dan M and Rotter, Jerome I and Rudan, Igor and Salomaa, Veikko and Samani, Nilesh J and Sanna, Serena and Sattar, Naveed and Schmidt, Ellen M and Scott, Robert A and Sever, Peter and Sevilla, Raquel S and Shaffer, Christian M and Sim, Xueling and Sivapalaratnam, Suthesh and Small, Kerrin S and Smith, Albert V and Smith, Blair H and Somayajula, Sangeetha and Southam, Lorraine and Spector, Timothy D and Speliotes, Elizabeth K and Starr, John M and Stirrups, Kathleen E and Stitziel, Nathan and Strauch, Konstantin and Stringham, Heather M and Surendran, Praveen and Tada, Hayato and Tall, Alan R and Tang, Hua and Tardif, Jean-Claude and Taylor, Kent D and Trompet, Stella and Tsao, Philip S and Tuomilehto, Jaakko and Tybjaerg-Hansen, Anne and van Zuydam, Natalie R and Varbo, Anette and Varga, Tibor V and Virtamo, Jarmo and Waldenberger, Melanie and Wang, Nan and Wareham, Nick J and Warren, Helen R and Weeke, Peter E and Weinstock, Joshua and Wessel, Jennifer and Wilson, James G and Wilson, Peter W F and Xu, Ming and Yaghootkar, Hanieh and Young, Robin and Zeggini, Eleftheria and Zhang, He and Zheng, Neil S and Zhang, Weihua and Zhang, Yan and Zhou, Wei and Zhou, Yanhua and Zoledziewska, Magdalena and Howson, Joanna M M and Danesh, John and McCarthy, Mark I and Cowan, Chad A and Abecasis, Goncalo and Deloukas, Panos and Musunuru, Kiran and Willer, Cristen J and Kathiresan, Sekar} } @article {7686, title = {A Large-Scale Multi-ancestry Genome-wide Study Accounting for Smoking Behavior Identifies Multiple Significant Loci for Blood Pressure.}, journal = {Am J Hum Genet}, volume = {102}, year = {2018}, month = {2018 Mar 01}, pages = {375-400}, abstract = {

Genome-wide association analysis advanced understanding of blood pressure (BP), a major risk factor for vascular conditions such as coronary heart disease and stroke. Accounting for smoking behavior may help identify BP loci and extend our knowledge of its genetic architecture. We performed genome-wide association meta-analyses of systolic and diastolic BP incorporating gene-smoking interactions in 610,091 individuals. Stage 1 analysis examined \~{}18.8 million SNPs and small insertion/deletion variants in 129,913 individuals from four ancestries (European, African, Asian, and Hispanic) with follow-up analysis of promising variants in 480,178 additional individuals from five ancestries. We identified 15 loci that were genome-wide significant (p < 5~{\texttimes} 10) in stage 1 and formally replicated in stage 2. A combined stage 1 and 2 meta-analysis identified 66 additional genome-wide significant loci (13, 35, and 18 loci in European, African, and trans-ancestry, respectively). A total of 56 known BP loci were also identified by our results (p < 5~{\texttimes} 10). Of the newly identified loci, ten showed significant interaction with smoking status, but none of them were replicated in stage 2. Several loci were identified in African ancestry, highlighting the importance of genetic studies in diverse populations. The identified loci show strong evidence for regulatory features and support shared pathophysiology with cardiometabolic and addiction traits. They also highlight a role in BP regulation for biological candidates such as modulators of vascular structure and function (CDKN1B, BCAR1-CFDP1, PXDN, EEA1), ciliopathies (SDCCAG8, RPGRIP1L), telomere maintenance (TNKS, PINX1, AKTIP), and central dopaminergic signaling (MSRA, EBF2).

}, issn = {1537-6605}, doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.01.015}, author = {Sung, Yun J and Winkler, Thomas W and de Las Fuentes, Lisa and Bentley, Amy R and Brown, Michael R and Kraja, Aldi T and Schwander, Karen and Ntalla, Ioanna and Guo, Xiuqing and Franceschini, Nora and Lu, Yingchang and Cheng, Ching-Yu and Sim, Xueling and Vojinovic, Dina and Marten, Jonathan and Musani, Solomon K and Li, Changwei and Feitosa, Mary F and Kilpel{\"a}inen, Tuomas O and Richard, Melissa A and Noordam, Raymond and Aslibekyan, Stella and Aschard, Hugues and Bartz, Traci M and Dorajoo, Rajkumar and Liu, Yongmei and Manning, Alisa K and Rankinen, Tuomo and Smith, Albert Vernon and Tajuddin, Salman M and Tayo, Bamidele O and Warren, Helen R and Zhao, Wei and Zhou, Yanhua and Matoba, Nana and Sofer, Tamar and Alver, Maris and Amini, Marzyeh and Boissel, Mathilde and Chai, Jin Fang and Chen, Xu and Divers, Jasmin and Gandin, Ilaria and Gao, Chuan and Giulianini, Franco and Goel, Anuj and Harris, Sarah E and Hartwig, Fernando Pires and Horimoto, Andrea R V R and Hsu, Fang-Chi and Jackson, Anne U and K{\"a}h{\"o}nen, Mika and Kasturiratne, Anuradhani and Kuhnel, Brigitte and Leander, Karin and Lee, Wen-Jane and Lin, Keng-Hung and {\textquoteright}an Luan, Jian and McKenzie, Colin A and Meian, He and Nelson, Christopher P and Rauramaa, Rainer and Schupf, Nicole and Scott, Robert A and Sheu, Wayne H H and Stan{\v c}{\'a}kov{\'a}, Alena and Takeuchi, Fumihiko and van der Most, Peter J and Varga, Tibor V and Wang, Heming and Wang, Yajuan and Ware, Erin B and Weiss, Stefan and Wen, Wanqing and Yanek, Lisa R and Zhang, Weihua and Zhao, Jing Hua and Afaq, Saima and Alfred, Tamuno and Amin, Najaf and Arking, Dan and Aung, Tin and Barr, R Graham and Bielak, Lawrence F and Boerwinkle, Eric and Bottinger, Erwin P and Braund, Peter S and Brody, Jennifer A and Broeckel, Ulrich and Cabrera, Claudia P and Cade, Brian and Caizheng, Yu and Campbell, Archie and Canouil, Micka{\"e}l and Chakravarti, Aravinda and Chauhan, Ganesh and Christensen, Kaare and Cocca, Massimiliano and Collins, Francis S and Connell, John M and de Mutsert, Ren{\'e}e and de Silva, H Janaka and Debette, Stephanie and D{\"o}rr, Marcus and Duan, Qing and Eaton, Charles B and Ehret, Georg and Evangelou, Evangelos and Faul, Jessica D and Fisher, Virginia A and Forouhi, Nita G and Franco, Oscar H and Friedlander, Yechiel and Gao, He and Gigante, Bruna and Graff, Misa and Gu, C Charles and Gu, Dongfeng and Gupta, Preeti and Hagenaars, Saskia P and Harris, Tamara B and He, Jiang and Heikkinen, Sami and Heng, Chew-Kiat and Hirata, Makoto and Hofman, Albert and Howard, Barbara V and Hunt, Steven and Irvin, Marguerite R and Jia, Yucheng and Joehanes, Roby and Justice, Anne E and Katsuya, Tomohiro and Kaufman, Joel and Kerrison, Nicola D and Khor, Chiea Chuen and Koh, Woon-Puay and Koistinen, Heikki A and Komulainen, Pirjo and Kooperberg, Charles and Krieger, Jose E and Kubo, Michiaki and Kuusisto, Johanna and Langefeld, Carl D and Langenberg, Claudia and Launer, Lenore J and Lehne, Benjamin and Lewis, Cora E and Li, Yize and Lim, Sing Hui and Lin, Shiow and Liu, Ching-Ti and Liu, Jianjun and Liu, Jingmin and Liu, Kiang and Liu, Yeheng and Loh, Marie and Lohman, Kurt K and Long, Jirong and Louie, Tin and M{\"a}gi, Reedik and Mahajan, Anubha and Meitinger, Thomas and Metspalu, Andres and Milani, Lili and Momozawa, Yukihide and Morris, Andrew P and Mosley, Thomas H and Munson, Peter and Murray, Alison D and Nalls, Mike A and Nasri, Ubaydah and Norris, Jill M and North, Kari and Ogunniyi, Adesola and Padmanabhan, Sandosh and Palmas, Walter R and Palmer, Nicholette D and Pankow, James S and Pedersen, Nancy L and Peters, Annette and Peyser, Patricia A and Polasek, Ozren and Raitakari, Olli T and Renstrom, Frida and Rice, Treva K and Ridker, Paul M and Robino, Antonietta and Robinson, Jennifer G and Rose, Lynda M and Rudan, Igor and Sabanayagam, Charumathi and Salako, Babatunde L and Sandow, Kevin and Schmidt, Carsten O and Schreiner, Pamela J and Scott, William R and Seshadri, Sudha and Sever, Peter and Sitlani, Colleen M and Smith, Jennifer A and Snieder, Harold and Starr, John M and Strauch, Konstantin and Tang, Hua and Taylor, Kent D and Teo, Yik Ying and Tham, Yih Chung and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and Waldenberger, Melanie and Wang, Lihua and Wang, Ya X and Wei, Wen Bin and Williams, Christine and Wilson, Gregory and Wojczynski, Mary K and Yao, Jie and Yuan, Jian-Min and Zonderman, Alan B and Becker, Diane M and Boehnke, Michael and Bowden, Donald W and Chambers, John C and Chen, Yii-Der Ida and de Faire, Ulf and Deary, Ian J and Esko, T{\~o}nu and Farrall, Martin and Forrester, Terrence and Franks, Paul W and Freedman, Barry I and Froguel, Philippe and Gasparini, Paolo and Gieger, Christian and Horta, Bernardo Lessa and Hung, Yi-Jen and Jonas, Jost B and Kato, Norihiro and Kooner, Jaspal S and Laakso, Markku and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Liang, Kae-Woei and Magnusson, Patrik K E and Newman, Anne B and Oldehinkel, Albertine J and Pereira, Alexandre C and Redline, Susan and Rettig, Rainer and Samani, Nilesh J and Scott, James and Shu, Xiao-Ou and van der Harst, Pim and Wagenknecht, Lynne E and Wareham, Nicholas J and Watkins, Hugh and Weir, David R and Wickremasinghe, Ananda R and Wu, Tangchun and Zheng, Wei and Kamatani, Yoichiro and Laurie, Cathy C and Bouchard, Claude and Cooper, Richard S and Evans, Michele K and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Kardia, Sharon L R and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Levy, Daniel and O{\textquoteright}Connell, Jeff R and Psaty, Bruce M and van Dam, Rob M and Sims, Mario and Arnett, Donna K and Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O and Kelly, Tanika N and Fox, Ervin R and Hayward, Caroline and Fornage, Myriam and Rotimi, Charles N and Province, Michael A and van Duijn, Cornelia M and Tai, E Shyong and Wong, Tien Yin and Loos, Ruth J F and Reiner, Alex P and Rotter, Jerome I and Zhu, Xiaofeng and Bierut, Laura J and Gauderman, W James and Caulfield, Mark J and Elliott, Paul and Rice, Kenneth and Munroe, Patricia B and Morrison, Alanna C and Cupples, L Adrienne and Rao, Dabeeru C and Chasman, Daniel I} } @article {8005, title = {Multi-ancestry genome-wide gene-smoking interaction study of 387,272 individuals identifies new loci associated with serum lipids.}, journal = {Nat Genet}, volume = {51}, year = {2019}, month = {2019 Apr}, pages = {636-648}, abstract = {

The concentrations of high- and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides are influenced by smoking, but it is unknown whether genetic associations with lipids may be modified by smoking. We conducted a multi-ancestry genome-wide gene-smoking interaction study in 133,805 individuals with follow-up in an additional 253,467 individuals. Combined meta-analyses identified 13 new loci associated with lipids, some of which were detected only because association differed by smoking status. Additionally, we demonstrate the importance of including diverse populations, particularly in studies of interactions with lifestyle factors, where genomic and lifestyle differences by ancestry may contribute to novel findings.

}, issn = {1546-1718}, doi = {10.1038/s41588-019-0378-y}, author = {Bentley, Amy R and Sung, Yun J and Brown, Michael R and Winkler, Thomas W and Kraja, Aldi T and Ntalla, Ioanna and Schwander, Karen and Chasman, Daniel I and Lim, Elise and Deng, Xuan and Guo, Xiuqing and Liu, Jingmin and Lu, Yingchang and Cheng, Ching-Yu and Sim, Xueling and Vojinovic, Dina and Huffman, Jennifer E and Musani, Solomon K and Li, Changwei and Feitosa, Mary F and Richard, Melissa A and Noordam, Raymond and Baker, Jenna and Chen, Guanjie and Aschard, Hugues and Bartz, Traci M and Ding, Jingzhong and Dorajoo, Rajkumar and Manning, Alisa K and Rankinen, Tuomo and Smith, Albert V and Tajuddin, Salman M and Zhao, Wei and Graff, Mariaelisa and Alver, Maris and Boissel, Mathilde and Chai, Jin Fang and Chen, Xu and Divers, Jasmin and Evangelou, Evangelos and Gao, Chuan and Goel, Anuj and Hagemeijer, Yanick and Harris, Sarah E and Hartwig, Fernando P and He, Meian and Horimoto, Andrea R V R and Hsu, Fang-Chi and Hung, Yi-Jen and Jackson, Anne U and Kasturiratne, Anuradhani and Komulainen, Pirjo and Kuhnel, Brigitte and Leander, Karin and Lin, Keng-Hung and Luan, Jian{\textquoteright}an and Lyytik{\"a}inen, Leo-Pekka and Matoba, Nana and Nolte, Ilja M and Pietzner, Maik and Prins, Bram and Riaz, Muhammad and Robino, Antonietta and Said, M Abdullah and Schupf, Nicole and Scott, Robert A and Sofer, Tamar and Stan{\v c}{\'a}kov{\'a}, Alena and Takeuchi, Fumihiko and Tayo, Bamidele O and van der Most, Peter J and Varga, Tibor V and Wang, Tzung-Dau and Wang, Yajuan and Ware, Erin B and Wen, Wanqing and Xiang, Yong-Bing and Yanek, Lisa R and Zhang, Weihua and Zhao, Jing Hua and Adeyemo, Adebowale and Afaq, Saima and Amin, Najaf and Amini, Marzyeh and Arking, Dan E and Arzumanyan, Zorayr and Aung, Tin and Ballantyne, Christie and Barr, R Graham and Bielak, Lawrence F and Boerwinkle, Eric and Bottinger, Erwin P and Broeckel, Ulrich and Brown, Morris and Cade, Brian E and Campbell, Archie and Canouil, Micka{\"e}l and Charumathi, Sabanayagam and Chen, Yii-Der Ida and Christensen, Kaare and Concas, Maria Pina and Connell, John M and de Las Fuentes, Lisa and de Silva, H Janaka and de Vries, Paul S and Doumatey, Ayo and Duan, Qing and Eaton, Charles B and Eppinga, Ruben N and Faul, Jessica D and Floyd, James S and Forouhi, Nita G and Forrester, Terrence and Friedlander, Yechiel and Gandin, Ilaria and Gao, He and Ghanbari, Mohsen and Gharib, Sina A and Gigante, Bruna and Giulianini, Franco and Grabe, Hans J and Gu, C Charles and Harris, Tamara B and Heikkinen, Sami and Heng, Chew-Kiat and Hirata, Makoto and Hixson, James E and Ikram, M Arfan and Jia, Yucheng and Joehanes, Roby and Johnson, Craig and Jonas, Jost Bruno and Justice, Anne E and Katsuya, Tomohiro and Khor, Chiea Chuen and Kilpel{\"a}inen, Tuomas O and Koh, Woon-Puay and Kolcic, Ivana and Kooperberg, Charles and Krieger, Jose E and Kritchevsky, Stephen B and Kubo, Michiaki and Kuusisto, Johanna and Lakka, Timo A and Langefeld, Carl D and Langenberg, Claudia and Launer, Lenore J and Lehne, Benjamin and Lewis, Cora E and Li, Yize and Liang, Jingjing and Lin, Shiow and Liu, Ching-Ti and Liu, Jianjun and Liu, Kiang and Loh, Marie and Lohman, Kurt K and Louie, Tin and Luzzi, Anna and M{\"a}gi, Reedik and Mahajan, Anubha and Manichaikul, Ani W and McKenzie, Colin A and Meitinger, Thomas and Metspalu, Andres and Milaneschi, Yuri and Milani, Lili and Mohlke, Karen L and Momozawa, Yukihide and Morris, Andrew P and Murray, Alison D and Nalls, Mike A and Nauck, Matthias and Nelson, Christopher P and North, Kari E and O{\textquoteright}Connell, Jeffrey R and Palmer, Nicholette D and Papanicolau, George J and Pedersen, Nancy L and Peters, Annette and Peyser, Patricia A and Polasek, Ozren and Poulter, Neil and Raitakari, Olli T and Reiner, Alex P and Renstrom, Frida and Rice, Treva K and Rich, Stephen S and Robinson, Jennifer G and Rose, Lynda M and Rosendaal, Frits R and Rudan, Igor and Schmidt, Carsten O and Schreiner, Pamela J and Scott, William R and Sever, Peter and Shi, Yuan and Sidney, Stephen and Sims, Mario and Smith, Jennifer A and Snieder, Harold and Starr, John M and Strauch, Konstantin and Stringham, Heather M and Tan, Nicholas Y Q and Tang, Hua and Taylor, Kent D and Teo, Yik Ying and Tham, Yih Chung and Tiemeier, Henning and Turner, Stephen T and Uitterlinden, Andr{\'e} G and van Heemst, Diana and Waldenberger, Melanie and Wang, Heming and Wang, Lan and Wang, Lihua and Wei, Wen Bin and Williams, Christine A and Wilson, Gregory and Wojczynski, Mary K and Yao, Jie and Young, Kristin and Yu, Caizheng and Yuan, Jian-Min and Zhou, Jie and Zonderman, Alan B and Becker, Diane M and Boehnke, Michael and Bowden, Donald W and Chambers, John C and Cooper, Richard S and de Faire, Ulf and Deary, Ian J and Elliott, Paul and Esko, T{\~o}nu and Farrall, Martin and Franks, Paul W and Freedman, Barry I and Froguel, Philippe and Gasparini, Paolo and Gieger, Christian and Horta, Bernardo L and Juang, Jyh-Ming Jimmy and Kamatani, Yoichiro and Kammerer, Candace M and Kato, Norihiro and Kooner, Jaspal S and Laakso, Markku and Laurie, Cathy C and Lee, I-Te and Lehtim{\"a}ki, Terho and Magnusson, Patrik K E and Oldehinkel, Albertine J and Penninx, Brenda W J H and Pereira, Alexandre C and Rauramaa, Rainer and Redline, Susan and Samani, Nilesh J and Scott, James and Shu, Xiao-Ou and van der Harst, Pim and Wagenknecht, Lynne E and Wang, Jun-Sing and Wang, Ya Xing and Wareham, Nicholas J and Watkins, Hugh and Weir, David R and Wickremasinghe, Ananda R and Wu, Tangchun and Zeggini, Eleftheria and Zheng, Wei and Bouchard, Claude and Evans, Michele K and Gudnason, Vilmundur and Kardia, Sharon L R and Liu, Yongmei and Psaty, Bruce M and Ridker, Paul M and van Dam, Rob M and Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O and Fornage, Myriam and Province, Michael A and Kelly, Tanika N and Fox, Ervin R and Hayward, Caroline and van Duijn, Cornelia M and Tai, E Shyong and Wong, Tien Yin and Loos, Ruth J F and Franceschini, Nora and Rotter, Jerome I and Zhu, Xiaofeng and Bierut, Laura J and Gauderman, W James and Rice, Kenneth and Munroe, Patricia B and Morrison, Alanna C and Rao, Dabeeru C and Rotimi, Charles N and Cupples, L Adrienne} }