Genes which shape human bodies

A new paper on the genetics of height, Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Scans for Human Adult Stature Identifies Novel Loci and Associations with Measures of Skeletal Frame Size:

Recent genome-wide (GW) scans have identified several independent loci affecting human stature, but their contribution through the different skeletal components of height is still poorly understood. We carried out a genome-wide scan in 12,611 participants, followed by replication in an additional 7,187 individuals, and identified 17 genomic regions with GW-significant association with height. Of these, two are entirely novel (rs11809207 in CATSPER4...and rs910316 in TMED10...and two had previously been described with weak statistical support (rs10472828 in NPR3...and rs849141 in JAZF1...One locus (rs1182188 at GNA12) identifies the first height eQTL. We also assessed the contribution of height loci to the upper- (trunk) and lower-body (hip axis and femur) skeletal components of height. We find evidence for several loci associated with trunk length (including rs6570507 in GPR126...and rs6817306 in LCORL...hip axis length (including rs6830062 at LCORL...and rs4911494 at UQCC...and femur length (including rs710841 at PRKG2...and rs10946808 at HIST1H1D...Finally, we used conditional analyses to explore a possible differential contribution of the height loci to these different skeletal size measurements. In addition to validating four novel loci controlling adult stature, our study represents the first effort to assess the contribution of genetic loci to three skeletal components of height. Further statistical tests in larger numbers of individuals will be required to verify if the height loci affect height preferentially through these subcomponents of height.

The study confirmed the role of HMGA2. Interestingly there is a possible clue to inter-ethnic differences in height:

The clinical relevance of the effects observed for these height loci is interesting and merits further exploration. Several loci displayed significant association with HAL, a measurement shown to vary between ethnic groups and to have substantial heritability.

HAL = "hip axis length." Various human populations exhibit different body forms. Some of this is a rather straightforward consequence of climate, and fits the pattern of other mammals (shorter extremities and lower surface area to volume ratio in higher latitudes).

Related: Genetics of human height.

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Curse you! I was just opening up my tabs to blog this paper when your post popped up in my reader.

It's a nice paper, though - good use of endophenotypes to pull apart a very complex trait. The first author is also the hardest-working person I know in genetics (which is why she's been a co-author on 12 genome-wide association studies in as many months).