Replication and exploratory analysis of 24 candidate risk polymorphisms for neural tube defects.

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Journal ArticleDate:
2014Access:
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Pangilinan F, Molloy AM, Mills JL, Troendle JF, Parle-McDermott A, Kay DM,Browne ML, McGrath EC, Abaan H, Sutton M, Kirke PN, Caggana M, Shane B, Scott JM, Brody LC., Replication and exploratory analysis of 24 candidate risk polymorphisms for neural tube defects., BMC Medical Genetics, 15, 1, 2014, 102-Download Item:
Abstract:
Background:
Neural tube defects (NTDs), which are among the most common congenital malformations, are
influenced by environmental and genetic factors. Low maternal folate is the strongest known contributing factor,
making variants in genes in the folate metabolic pathway attractive candidates for NTD risk. Multiple studies have
identified nominally significant allelic associations with NTDs. We tested whether associations detected in a large
Irish cohort could be replicated in an independent population.
Methods:
Replication tests of 24 nominally significant NTD associations were performed in racially/ethnically
matched populations. Family-based tests of fifteen nominally significant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)
were repeated in a cohort of NTD trios (530 cases and their parents) from the United Kingdom, and case
–
control
tests of nine nominally significant SNPs were repeated in a cohort (190 cases, 941 controls) from New York State
(NYS). Secondary hypotheses involved evaluating the latter set of nine SNPs for NTD association using alternate
case
–
control models and NTD groupings in white, African American and Hispanic cohorts from NYS.
Results:
Of the 24 SNPs tested for replication,
ADA
rs452159 and
MTR
rs10925260 were significantly associated with
isolated NTDs. Of the secondary tests performed,
ARID1A
rs11247593 was associated with NTDs in whites, and
ALDH1A2
rs7169289 was associated with isolated NTDs in African Americans.
Conclusions:
We report a number of associations between SNP genotypes and neural tube defects. These
associations were nominally significant before correction for multiple hypothesis testing. These corrections are
highly conservative for association studies of untested hypotheses, and may be too conservative for replication
studies. We therefore believe the true effect of these four nominally significant SNPs on NTD risk will be more
definitively determined by further study in other populations, and eventual meta-analysis
Sponsor
Grant Number
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Health Research Board (HRB)
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/amolloyhttp://people.tcd.ie/masutton
Description:
PUBLISHED
Author: Molloy, Anne; Sutton, Marie
Sponsor:
National Institutes of Health (NIH)Health Research Board (HRB)
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
BMC Medical Genetics15
1
Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Genes & SocietyDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12881-014-0102-9Metadata
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