Localizing Components of Shared Transethnic Genetic Architecture of Complex Traits from GWAS Summary Data.
Am J Hum Genet
; 106(6): 805-817, 2020 06 04.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32442408
Despite strong transethnic genetic correlations reported in the literature for many complex traits, the non-transferability of polygenic risk scores across populations suggests the presence of population-specific components of genetic architecture. We propose an approach that models GWAS summary data for one trait in two populations to estimate genome-wide proportions of population-specific/shared causal SNPs. In simulations across various genetic architectures, we show that our approach yields approximately unbiased estimates with in-sample LD and slight upward-bias with out-of-sample LD. We analyze nine complex traits in individuals of East Asian and European ancestry, restricting to common SNPs (MAF > 5%), and find that most common causal SNPs are shared by both populations. Using the genome-wide estimates as priors in an empirical Bayes framework, we perform fine-mapping and observe that high-posterior SNPs (for both the population-specific and shared causal configurations) have highly correlated effects in East Asians and Europeans. In population-specific GWAS risk regions, we observe a 2.8× enrichment of shared high-posterior SNPs, suggesting that population-specific GWAS risk regions harbor shared causal SNPs that are undetected in the other GWASs due to differences in LD, allele frequencies, and/or sample size. Finally, we report enrichments of shared high-posterior SNPs in 53 tissue-specific functional categories and find evidence that SNP-heritability enrichments are driven largely by many low-effect common SNPs.
Palabras clave
Texto completo:
1
Colección:
01-internacional
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Etnicidad
/
Herencia Multifactorial
/
Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple
/
Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo
Tipo de estudio:
Prognostic_studies
Límite:
Humans
País/Región como asunto:
Asia
/
Europa
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Am J Hum Genet
Año:
2020
Tipo del documento:
Article