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Meta-Analysis
. 2018 Jul 25;13(7):e0200486.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200486. eCollection 2018.

The genetic underpinnings of variation in ages at menarche and natural menopause among women from the multi-ethnic Population Architecture using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) Study: A trans-ethnic meta-analysis

Affiliations
Meta-Analysis

The genetic underpinnings of variation in ages at menarche and natural menopause among women from the multi-ethnic Population Architecture using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) Study: A trans-ethnic meta-analysis

Lindsay Fernández-Rhodes et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Current knowledge of the genetic architecture of key reproductive events across the female life course is largely based on association studies of European descent women. The relevance of known loci for age at menarche (AAM) and age at natural menopause (ANM) in diverse populations remains unclear. We investigated 32 AAM and 14 ANM previously-identified loci and sought to identify novel loci in a trans-ethnic array-wide study of 196,483 SNPs on the MetaboChip (Illumina, Inc.). A total of 45,364 women of diverse ancestries (African, Hispanic/Latina, Asian American and American Indian/Alaskan Native) in the Population Architecture using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) Study were included in cross-sectional analyses of AAM and ANM. Within each study we conducted a linear regression of SNP associations with self-reported or medical record-derived AAM or ANM (in years), adjusting for birth year, population stratification, and center/region, as appropriate, and meta-analyzed results across studies using multiple meta-analytic techniques. For both AAM and ANM, we observed more directionally consistent associations with the previously reported risk alleles than expected by chance (p-valuesbinomial≤0.01). Eight densely genotyped reproductive loci generalized significantly to at least one non-European population. We identified one trans-ethnic array-wide SNP association with AAM and two significant associations with ANM, which have not been described previously. Additionally, we observed evidence of independent secondary signals at three of six AAM trans-ethnic loci. Our findings support the transferability of reproductive trait loci discovered in European women to women of other race/ethnicities and indicate the presence of additional trans-ethnic associations both at both novel and established loci. These findings suggest the benefit of including diverse populations in future studies of the genetic architecture of female growth and development.

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Conflict of interest statement

Two coauthors were affiliated with commercial organizations (JRM at Write InSciTe, LLC, and JMJ at the Genotyping Arrays Division at Illumina, Inc.) at the time of the completion of this manuscript. These affiliations did not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing and data materials. Therefore, the coauthors collectively have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Regional plots for age at menarche Bonferroni-significant loci at SEC16B (Panel A), BDNF (Panel B) and FTO (Panel C), showing previously published body mass index (BMI) primary and secondary SNP associations, using a modified random-effects trans-ethnic meta-analysis of more than 31,000 women.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Regional plots of the novel array-wide significant age at menarche (Panel A: CUX2) and natural menopause loci (Panels B,C: FRMD5, GPRC5B) using a modified random-effects trans-ethnic meta-analysis of more than 31,000 women, and showing independence from previously published cardiometabolic SNP associations (shown in gray if missing).

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