Disease areas:
  • bones, joints and muscles
Last updated:
Author(s):
Yunfeng Huang, Dora Bodnar, Chia-Yen Chen, Gabriela Sanchez-Andrade, Mark Sanderson, Jun Shi, Katherine G. Meilleur, Matthew E. Hurles, Sebastian S. Gerety, Ellen A. Tsai, Heiko Runz
Publish date:
10 June 2023
Journal:
Nature Communications
PubMed ID:
37301943

Abstract

Muscle strength is highly heritable and predictive for multiple adverse health outcomes including mortality. Here, we present a rare protein-coding variant association study in 340,319 individuals for hand grip strength, a proxy measure of muscle strength. We show that the exome-wide burden of rare protein-truncating and damaging missense variants is associated with a reduction in hand grip strength. We identify six significant hand grip strength genes, KDM5B, OBSCN, GIGYF1, TTN, RB1CC1, and EIF3J. In the example of the titin (TTN) locus we demonstrate a convergence of rare with common variant association signals and uncover genetic relationships between reduced hand grip strength and disease. Finally, we identify shared mechanisms between brain and muscle function and uncover additive effects between rare and common genetic variation on muscle strength.

Related projects

1. The primary scientific goal of the research is to apply human genetics to the identification of new drug targets, the validation of existing targets…

Institution:
Regeneron Genetics Center, LLC, United States of America

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