Publication: Phenome-wide heritability analysis of the UK Biobank
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Date
2017
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Public Library of Science
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Citation
Ge, Tian, Chia-Yen Chen, Benjamin M. Neale, Mert R. Sabuncu, and Jordan W. Smoller. 2017. “Phenome-wide heritability analysis of the UK Biobank.” PLoS Genetics 13 (4): e1006711. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006711. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006711.
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Abstract
Heritability estimation provides important information about the relative contribution of genetic and environmental factors to phenotypic variation, and provides an upper bound for the utility of genetic risk prediction models. Recent technological and statistical advances have enabled the estimation of additive heritability attributable to common genetic variants (SNP heritability) across a broad phenotypic spectrum. Here, we present a computationally and memory efficient heritability estimation method that can handle large sample sizes, and report the SNP heritability for 551 complex traits derived from the interim data release (152,736 subjects) of the large-scale, population-based UK Biobank, comprising both quantitative phenotypes and disease codes. We demonstrate that common genetic variation contributes to a broad array of quantitative traits and human diseases in the UK population, and identify phenotypes whose heritability is moderated by age (e.g., a majority of physical measures including height and body mass index), sex (e.g., blood pressure related traits) and socioeconomic status (education). Our study represents the first comprehensive phenome-wide heritability analysis in the UK Biobank, and underscores the importance of considering population characteristics in interpreting heritability.
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Keywords
Biology and Life Sciences, Genetics, Phenotypes, Evolutionary Biology, Population Genetics, Genetic Polymorphism, Population Biology, Heredity, Complex Traits, Human Genetics, Computational Biology, Genome Analysis, Genome-Wide Association Studies, Genomics, Social Sciences, Sociology, Social Stratification, Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Cognition, Memory, Learning and Memory, Medicine and Health Sciences, Dermatology, Skin Neoplasms, Malignant Skin Neoplasms
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