A Multi-Cohort Genome-Wide Association Study In African Ancestry Individuals Reveals Risk Loci For Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma
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Cell press
Abstract
Primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide,disproportionately affects individuals of African ancestry. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for
POAG in 11,275 individuals of African ancestry (6,003 cases; 5,272 controls). We detected 46 risk loci associated with POAG at genome-wide significance. Replication and post-GWAS analyses, including functionally
informed fine-mapping, multiple trait co-localization, and in silico validation implicated two previously undescribed variants (rs1666698 mapping to DBF4P2; rs34957764 mapping to ROCK1P1) and one previously
associated variant (rs11824032 mapping to ARHGEF12) as likely causal. For individuals of African ancestry,
a polygenic risk score (PRS) for POAG from our mega-analysis (African ancestry individuals) outperformed a
PRS from summary statistics of a much larger GWAS derived from European ancestry individuals. This study
quantifies the genetic architecture similarities and differences between African and non-African ancestry
populations for this blinding disease.
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Research Article