rs118143968 - SF3A1
Magnitude 2.2 · 2 studies on file
Reported associations
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Genetic basis of pregnancy-associated decreased platelet counts and gestational thrombocytopenia∗ - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 38064665
ABSTRACT: Key Points PEAR1 and CBL variants demonstrate time-specific genetic influences on platelet count throughout the course of pregnancy. PEAR1 and TUBB1 variants play a major role in contributing to the genetic predisposition for GT and severe GT. Visual Abstract Abstract Platelet count reduction occurs throughout pregnancy, with 5% to 12% of pregnant women being diagnosed with gestational thrombocytopenia (GT), characterized by a more marked decrease in platelet count during pregnancy. However, the underlying biological mechanism behind these phenomena remains unclear. Here, we used sequencing data from noninvasive prenatal testing of 100 186 Chinese pregnant individuals and conducted, to our knowledge, the hitherto largest-scale genome-wide association studies on platelet counts
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The contribution of common and rare genetic variants to variation in metabolic traits in 288,137 East Asians - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 36333282
ABSTRACT: Metabolic traits are heritable phenotypes widely-used in assessing the risk of various diseases. We conduct a genome-wide association analysis (GWAS) of nine metabolic traits (including glycemic, lipid, liver enzyme levels) in 125,872 Korean subjects genotyped with the Korea Biobank Array. Following meta-analysis with GWAS from Biobank Japan identify 144 novel signals (MAF ≥ 1%), of which 57.0% are replicated in UK Biobank. Additionally, we discover 66 rare (MAF < 1%) variants, 94.4% of them co-incident to common loci, adding to allelic series. Although rare variants have limited contribution to overall trait variance, these lead, in carriers, substantial loss of predictive accuracy from polygenic predictions of disease risk from common variant alone. We capture groups
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Lifestyle context
Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.
Bloodwork
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LDL cholesterol Moderate
SF3A1 rs118143968 C allele is associated with elevated LDL cholesterol
Check lipid panel every 1-2 years
Diet
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Saturated fat reduction Moderate
High dietary saturated fat raises LDL; genetic predisposition makes management important
Reduce saturated fat to less than 7% of daily calories