4.7 Article

A genome-wide linkage scan for age at menarche in three populations of European descent

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 93, Issue 10, Pages 3965-3970

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/jc.2007-2568

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centre Program
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council(NHMRC) of Australia [339430, 941177, 971232, 950998, 981339, 241944, 389982]
  3. National Institute of Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse [AA07535, AA07728, AA10249]
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [AA07728, AA10249, AA09022, AA11998, AA10333, DA00272, DA12854, AA00277, CA88363]
  5. Australian Research Council [A79600334, A79801419, A79906588, DP0212016]
  6. Human Frontier Science Program [RG0154.1998-B]
  7. Spinozapremie [NWO/SPI 56-464-14192]
  8. NWO [400-05-717, 051.02.060]
  9. MRC (United Kingdom)
  10. Center for Medical Systems Biology (NWO Genomics)
  11. [ZonMW 940-37-024]
  12. [NWO-MagW 480-04-004]
  13. [EU/QLRT-2001-01254]

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Context: Age at menarche (AAM) is an important trait both biologically and socially, a clearly defined event in female pubertal development, and has been associated with many clinically significant phenotypes. Objective: The objective of the study was to identify genetic loci influencing variation in AAM in large population-based samples from three countries. Design/Participants: Recalled AAM data were collected from 13,697 individuals and 4,899 pseudo-independent sister-pairs from three different populations (Australia, The Netherlands, and the United Kingdom) by mailed questionnaire or interview. Genome-wide variance components linkage analysis was implemented on each sample individually and in combination. Results: The mean, SD, and heritability of AAM across the three samples was 13.1 yr, 1.5 yr, and 0.69, respectively. No loci were detected that reached genome-wide significance in the combined analysis, but a suggestive locus was detected on chromosome 12 (logarithm of the odds = 2.0). Three loci of suggestive significance were seen in the U. K. sample on chromosomes 1, 4, and 18 (logarithm of the odds = 2.4, 2.2 and 3.2, respectively). Conclusions: There was no evidence for common highly penetrant variants influencing AAM. Linkage and association suggest that one trait locus for AAM is located on chromosome 12, but further studies are required to replicate these results.

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