Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

A genome-wide association study of serum proteins reveals shared loci with common diseases

Alexander Guðjónsson, Valborg Guðmundsdóttir, G. Axelsson, Elías F. Guðmundsson, Brynjolfur G. Jonsson, Lenore J. Launer, John R. Lamb, Lori L. Jennings, Thor Aspelund, Valur Emilsson, Vilmundur Guðnason

Nature Communications · 2022

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

With the growing number of genetic association studies, the genotype-phenotype atlas has become increasingly more complex, yet the functional consequences of most disease associated alleles is not understood. The measurement of protein level variation in solid tissues and biofluids integrated with genetic variants offers a path to deeper functional insights. Here we present a large-scale proteogenomic study in 5,368 individuals, revealing 4,035 independent associations between genetic variants and 2,091 serum proteins, of which 36% are previously unreported. The majority of both cis- and trans-acting genetic signals are unique for a single protein, although our results also highlight numerous highly pleiotropic genetic effects on protein levels and demonstrate that a protein's genetic asso

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-021-27850-z
Catalogue ID
SNmoj1y2gk-v9lfn9
Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.