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  5. Directional dominance on stature and cognition in diverse human populations

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Article
en
2015

Directional dominance on stature and cognition in diverse human populations

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en
2015
eprints.qut.edu.au/94581/

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Claude Bouchard
Claude Bouchard

Pennington Biomedical Research Center

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Peter K. Joshi
Tõnu Esko
Hannele Mattsson
+97 more

Abstract

Homozygosity has long been associated with rare, often devastating, Mendelian disorders1, and Darwin was one of the first to recognize that inbreeding reduces evolutionary fitness2. However, the effect of the more distant parental relatedness that is common in modern human populations is less well understood. Genomic data now allow us to investigate the effects of homozygosity on traits of public health importance by observing contiguous homozygous segments (runs of homozygosity), which are inferred to be homozygous along their complete length. Given the low levels of genome-wide homozygosity prevalent in most human populations, information is required on very large numbers of people to provide sufficient power3, 4. Here we use runs of homozygosity to study 16 health-related quantitative traits in 354,224 individuals from 102 cohorts, and find statistically significant associations between summed runs of homozygosity and four complex traits: height, forced expiratory lung volume in one second, general cognitive ability and educational attainment (P < 1 × 10−300, 2.1 × 10−6, 2.5 × 10−10 and 1.8 × 10−10, respectively). In each case, increased homozygosity was associated with decreased trait value, equivalent to the offspring of first cousins being 1.2 cm shorter and having 10 months’ less education. Similar effect sizes were found across four continental groups and populations with different degrees of genome-wide homozygosity, providing evidence that homozygosity, rather than confounding, directly contributes to phenotypic variance. Contrary to earlier reports in substantially smaller samples5, 6, no evidence was seen of an influence of genome-wide homozygosity on blood pressure and low density lipoprotein cholesterol, or ten other cardio-metabolic traits. Since directional dominance is predicted for traits under directional evolutionary selection7, this study provides evidence that increased stature and cognitive function have been positively selected in human evolution, whereas many important risk factors for late-onset complex diseases may not have been.

How to cite this publication

Peter K. Joshi, Tõnu Esko, Hannele Mattsson, Niina Eklund, Ilaria Gandin, Teresa Nutile, Anne Jackson, Claudia Schurmann, Albert V. Smith, Weihua Zhang, Yukinori Okada, Alena Stančáková, Jessica D. Faul, Wei Zhao, Traci M. Bartz, Maria Pina Concas, Nora Franceschini, Stefan Enroth, Véronique Vitart, Stella Trompet, Xiuqing Guo, Daniel I. Chasman, Jeffrey R. O’Connel, Tanguy Corre, Suraj S. Nongmaithem, Yuning Chen, Massimo Mangino, Daniela Ruggiero, Michela Traglia, Aliki‐Eleni Farmaki, Tim Kacprowski, Andrew Bjonnes, Ashley van der Spek, Ying Wu, Anil K. Giri, Lisa R. Yanek, Lihua Wang, Edith Hofer, Cornelius A. Rietveld, Olga McLeod, Marilyn C. Cornelis, Cristian Pattaro, Niek Verweij, Clemens Baumbach, Abdel Abdellaoui, Helen R. Warren, Dragana Vuckovic, Hao Mei, Claude Bouchard, John R. B. Perry, Stefania Cappellani, Saira Saeed Mirza, Miles C. Benton, Ulrich Broeckel, Sarah E. Medland, Penelope A. Lind, Giovanni Malerba, Alexander Drong, Loïc Yengo, Lawrence F. Bielak, Degui Zhi, Peter J. van der Most, Daniel Shriner, Reedik Mägi, Gibran Hemani, Tugce Karaderi, Thomas J. Wang, Tian Liu, Ilja Demuth, Jing Hua Zhao, Weihua Meng, Lazaros Lataniotis, Sander W. van der Laan, Jonathan P. Bradfield, Andrew R. Wood, Amélie Bonnefond, Tarunveer S. Ahluwalia, Leanne M. Hall, Erika Salvi, Seyhan Yazar, Lisbeth Carstensen, Hugoline G. de Haan, Mark Abney, Uzma Afzal, Matthew Allison, Najaf Amin, Folkert W. Asselbergs, Stephan J. L. Bakker, R. Graham Barr, Sebastian E. Baumeister, Daniel J. Benjamin, Sven Bergmann, Eric Boerwinkle, Erwin P. Böttinger, Archie Campbell, Aravinda Chakravarti, Yingleong Chan, Stephen J. Chanock, Constance Chen, Y.-D. Ida Chen (2015). Directional dominance on stature and cognition in diverse human populations.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2015

Authors

100

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

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