4.6 Review

Generalizability of GWA-Identified Genetic Risk Variants for Metabolic Traits to Populations from the Arabian Peninsula

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12101637

Keywords

risk loci; metabolic traits; GWAS; transferability of risk loci; population diversity; Arab ancestry

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The Arab population on the Arabian Peninsula is characterized by consanguinity and endogamy, resulting in inbreeding. While some studies have found replicability of GWA-identified metabolic risk variants in the Arab population, overall transferability remains low. It is important to conduct large-scale GWA studies on deeply phenotyped cohorts of at least 20,000 Arab individuals to improve our understanding of genetic correlations and phenotype variance in this population.
The Arabian Peninsula, located at the nexus of Africa, Europe, and Asia, was implicated in early human migration. The Arab population is characterized by consanguinity and endogamy leading to inbreeding. Global genome-wide association (GWA) studies on metabolic traits under-represent the Arab population. Replicability of GWA-identified association signals in the Arab population has not been satisfactorily explored. It is important to assess how well GWA-identified findings generalize if their clinical interpretations are to benefit the target population. Our recent study from Kuwait, which performed genome-wide imputation and meta-analysis, observed 304 (from 151 genes) of the 4746 GWA-identified metabolic risk variants replicable in the Arab population. A recent large GWA study from Qatar found replication of 30 GWA-identified lipid risk variants. These complementing studies from the Peninsula increase the confidence in generalizing metabolic risk loci to the Arab population. However, both the studies reported a low extent of transferability. In this review, we examine the observed low transferability in the context of differences in environment, genetic correlations (allele frequencies, linkage disequilibrium, effect sizes, and heritability), and phenotype variance. We emphasize the need for large-scale GWA studies on deeply phenotyped cohorts of at least 20,000 Arab individuals. The review further presents GWA-identified metabolic risk variants generalizable to the Arab population.

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