rs10098778 - NDUFAF6
Magnitude 2.2 · 2 studies on file
Reported associations
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Genome-wide association analysis of dementia and its clinical endophenotypes reveal novel loci associated with Alzheimer's disease and three causality networks: The GR@ACE project. - Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association (2020) · Moreno-Grau S, de Rojas I, Hernández I, Quintela I, Montrreal L, Alegret M, Hernández-Olasagarre B, Madrid L, González-Perez A, Maroñas O, Rosende-Roca M, Mauleón A, Vargas L, Lafuente A, Abdelnour C, Rodríguez-Gómez O, Gil S, Santos-Santos MÁ, Espinosa A, Ortega G, Sanabria Á, Pérez-Cordón A, Cañabate P, Moreno M, Preckler S, Ruiz S, Aguilera N, Pineda JA, Macías J, Alarcón-Martín E, Sotolongo-Grau O, Marquié M, Monté-Rubio G, Valero S, Benaque A, Clarimón J, Bullido MJ, García-Ribas G, Pástor P, Sánchez-Juan P, Álvarez V, Piñol-Ripoll G, García-Alberca JM, Royo JL, Franco E, Mir P, Calero M, Medina M, Rábano A, Ávila J, Antúnez C, Real LM, Orellana A, Carracedo Á, Sáez ME, Tárraga L, Boada M, Ruiz A · PubMed 31473137
Large variability among Alzheimer's disease (AD) cases might impact genetic discoveries and complicate dissection of underlying biological pathways. Genome Research at Fundacio ACE (GR@ACE) is a genome-wide study of dementia and its clinical endophenotypes, defined based on AD's clinical certainty and vascular burden. We assessed the impact of known AD loci across endophenotypes to generate loci categories. We incorporated gene coexpression data and conducted pathway analysis per category. Finally, to evaluate the effect of heterogeneity in genetic studies, GR@ACE series were meta-analyzed with additional genome-wide association study data sets. We classified known AD loci into three categories, which might reflect the disease clinical heterogeneity. Vascular processes were only detected a
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Trans-ethnic and ancestry-specific blood-cell genetics in 746,667 individuals from 5 global populations - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 32888493
ABSTRACT: SUMMARY Most loci identified by GWAS have been found in populations of European ancestry (EUR). In trans-ethnic meta-analyses for 15 hematological traits in 746,667 participants, including 184,535 non-EUR individuals, we identified 5,552 trait-variant associations at P<5×10−9, including 71 novel loci not found in EUR populations. We also identified 28 additional novel variants in ancestry-specific, non-EUR meta-analyses, including an IL7 missense variant in South Asians associated with lymphocyte count in vivo and IL7 secretion levels in vitro. Fine-mapping prioritized variants annotated as functional, and generated 95% credible sets that were 30% smaller when using the trans-ethnic as opposed to the EUR-only results. We explored the clinical significance and predictive value
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