rs11631778 - THSD4

Magnitude 2.8 · 4 studies on file

Reported associations

  • Diversity and scale: Genetic architecture of 2068 traits in the VA Million Veteran Program - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 39024449

    ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: Findings from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have provided foundational knowledge of the genetic basis of disease, facilitating precision approaches for prevention and treatment. Current GWAS results are limited by underrepresentation of individuals from diverse populations, leading to concerns with generalizability regarding our knowledge of the relationships between genes, traits, and disease. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Million Veteran Program (MVP), one of the largest US-based biobanks, addresses this need; 29% of MVP comprises individuals genetically similar to African (AFR), Admixed American (AMR), and East Asian (EAS) reference populations. With over 635,000 participants and more than 44.3M genotyped variants linked with detailed phenotyp

  • A Genomics England haplotype reference panel and imputation of UK Biobank - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 39134668

    ABSTRACT: We built a reference panel with 342 million autosomal variants using 78,195 individuals from the Genomics England (GEL) dataset, achieving a phasing switch error rate of 0.18% for European samples and imputation quality of r2 = 0.75 for variants with minor allele frequencies as low as 2 × 10−4 in white British samples. The GEL-imputed UK Biobank genome-wide association analysis identified 70% of associations found by direct exome sequencing (P < 2.18 × 10−11), while extending testing of rare variants to the entire genome. Coding variants dominated the rare-variant genome-wide association results, implying less disruptive effects of rare non-coding variants. A Genomics England haplotype reference panel constructed using sequence data from 78,195 individuals

  • A whole genome sequencing study of moderate to severe asthma identifies a lung function locus associated with asthma risk - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 35368043

    ABSTRACT: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many common variant loci associated with asthma susceptibility, but few studies investigate the genetics underlying moderate-to-severe asthma risk. Here, we present a whole-genome sequencing study comparing 3181 moderate-to-severe asthma patients to 3590 non-asthma controls. We demonstrate that asthma risk is genetically correlated with lung function measures and that this component of asthma risk is orthogonal to the eosinophil genetics that also contribute to disease susceptibility. We find that polygenic scores for reduced lung function are associated with younger asthma age of onset. Genome-wide, seven previously reported common asthma variant loci and one previously reported lung function locus, near THSD4, reach signifi

  • Genome-wide association analyses using electronic health records identify new loci influencing blood pressure variation - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 27841878

    ABSTRACT: Longitudinal electronic health records on 99,785 Genetic Epidemiology Research on Adult Health and Aging (GERA) cohort individuals provided 1,342,814 systolic and diastolic blood pressure measurements for a genome-wide association study on long-term average systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure. We identified 39 novel among 75 significant loci (P≤5×10−8), most replicating in the combined International Consortium for Blood Pressure (ICBP, n=69,396) and UK Biobank (UKB, n=152,081) studies. Combining GERA with ICBP yielded 36 additional novel loci, most replicating in UKB. Combining all three studies (n=321,262) yielded 241 additional genome-wide significant loci, although for these no replication sample was available. All associated loci explained 2.9%/2.5%/3.1% of systolic/


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Lifestyle context

Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.

Discuss with your doctor

  • respiratory disease prevention and screening strategies Moderate

    G allele increases moderate-to-severe asthma risk (OR 1.23) and associates with COPD via impaired lung structural integrity

    Discuss prevention, early detection strategies, and warning signs at next visit

Exercise

  • regular aerobic exercise Low

    Aerobic fitness maintains lung and cardiovascular function; THSD4 impairment makes function maintenance particularly important

    150 minutes per week moderate-intensity aerobic activity

Lifestyle

  • smoking Moderate

    THSD4 variant reduces lung structural protein expression; smoking further damages lung architecture and compounds structural integrity risk

Screening

  • baseline spirometry and periodic lung function monitoring Moderate

    G allele reduces THSD4 expression in lung tissue, impairing structural protein needed for airway integrity

    Baseline spirometry (FEV1/FVC), then annually or every 2 years

  • blood pressure monitoring Moderate

    G allele increases diastolic blood pressure and reduces THSD4 expression in coronary artery tissue

    Baseline BP check, then at least annually