Genome-wide association study identifies two loci strongly affecting transferrin glycosylation.


Autoria(s): Kutalik Zoltán; Benyamin Beben; Bergmann Sven; Mooser Vincent; Waeber Gérard; Montgomery Grant W.; Martin Nicholas G.; Madden Pamela A. F.; Heath Andrew C.; Beckmann Jacques S.; Vollenweider Peter; Marques-Vidal Pedro Manuel; Whitfield John B.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Polysaccharide sidechains attached to proteins play important roles in cell-cell and receptor-ligand interactions. Variation in the carbohydrate component has been extensively studied for the iron transport protein transferrin, because serum levels of the transferrin isoforms asialotransferrin + disialotransferrin (carbohydrate-deficient transferrin, CDT) are used as biomarkers of excessive alcohol intake. We conducted a genome-wide association study to assess whether genetic factors affect CDT concentration in serum. CDT was measured in three population-based studies: one in Switzerland (CoLaus study, n = 5181) and two in Australia (n = 1509, n = 775). The first cohort was used as the discovery panel and the latter ones served as replication. Genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) typing data were used to identify loci with significant associations with CDT as a percentage of total transferrin (CDT%). The top three SNPs in the discovery panel (rs2749097 near PGM1 on chromosome 1, and missense polymorphisms rs1049296, rs1799899 in TF on chromosome 3) were successfully replicated , yielding genome-wide significant combined association with CDT% (P = 1.9 × 10(-9), 4 × 10(-39), 5.5 × 10(-43), respectively) and explain 5.8% of the variation in CDT%. These allelic effects are postulated to be caused by variation in availability of glucose-1-phosphate as a precursor of the glycan (PGM1), and variation in transferrin (TF) structure.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_4CBEDBD36408

isbn:1460-2083 (Electronic)

pmid:21665994

doi:10.1093/hmg/ddr272

isiid:000294442200017

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Human Molecular Genetics, vol. 20, no. 18, pp. 3710-3717

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article