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Identification of Genetic Variants for Female Obesity and Evaluation of the Causal Role of Genetically Defined Obesity in Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

Title
Identification of Genetic Variants for Female Obesity and Evaluation of the Causal Role of Genetically Defined Obesity in Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
Authors
Ahn, YeongseonLee, HyejinCho, Yoon Shin
Ewha Authors
이혜진
SCOPUS Author ID
이혜진scopus
Issue Date
2020
Journal Title
DIABETES METABOLIC SYNDROME AND OBESITY-TARGETS AND THERAPY
ISSN
1178-7007JCR Link
Citation
DIABETES METABOLIC SYNDROME AND OBESITY-TARGETS AND THERAPY vol. 13, pp. 4311 - 4322
Keywords
female obesitypolycystic ovarian syndromecausal relationgenome-wide association studyMendelian randomization
Publisher
DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Purpose: Observational studies have demonstrated an increased risk of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) in obese women. This study aimed to identify genetic variants influencing obesity in females and to evaluate the causal association between genetically defined obesity and PCOS in Korean women. Methods: Two-stage GWAS was conducted to identify genetic variants influencing obesity traits (such as body mass index [BMI], waist-hip ratio [WHR], and waist circumference [WC]) in Korean women. Two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was employed to evaluate the causal effect of variants as genetic instruments for female obesity on PCOS. Results: Meta-analysis of 9953 females combining discovery (N = 4658) and replication (N = 5295) stages detected four (rs11162584, rs6760543, rs828104, rs56137030), six (rs139702234, rs2341967, rs73059848, rs5020945, rs550532151, rs61971548), and two genetic variants (rs7722169, rs7206790) suggesting a highly significant association (P < 1x10-6) with BMI, WHR, and WC, respectively. Of these, an intron variant rs56137030 in FTO achieved genome-wide significant association (P = 3.39x10-8) with BMI in females. Using variants for female obesity, their effect on PCOS in 946 cases and 976 controls was evaluated by MR analysis. MR results indicated no significant association between genetically defined obesity and PCOS in Korean women. Conclusion: This study, for the first time, revealed genetic variants for female obesity in the Korean population and reported no causal association between genetically defined obesity and PCOS in Korean women.
DOI
10.2147/DMSO.S281529
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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