2019
DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/nqy272
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Disentangling the genetics of lean mass

Abstract: Background: Lean body mass (LM) plays an important role in mobility and metabolic function. We previously identified five loci associated with LM adjusted for fat mass in kilograms. Such an adjustment may reduce the power to identify genetic signals having an association with both lean mass and fat mass. Objectives: To determine the impact of different fat mass adjustments on genetic architecture of LM and identify additional LM loci. Methods: We performed genome-wide association analyses for whole-body LM (20… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Large-scale GWAS consortia continue to discover muscle-related loci through amassing data from immense cohorts of consistently phenotyped people. For example, international consortia have published the largest GWAS meta-analyses of lean mass (Zillikens et al, 2017;Karasik et al, 2018) and hand grip strength (Matteini et al, 2016;Willems et al, 2017;Tikkanen et al, 2018) to date.…”
Section: Uncovering the Genomic Architecture Of Sarcopeniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Large-scale GWAS consortia continue to discover muscle-related loci through amassing data from immense cohorts of consistently phenotyped people. For example, international consortia have published the largest GWAS meta-analyses of lean mass (Zillikens et al, 2017;Karasik et al, 2018) and hand grip strength (Matteini et al, 2016;Willems et al, 2017;Tikkanen et al, 2018) to date.…”
Section: Uncovering the Genomic Architecture Of Sarcopeniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most recent GWAS for anthropometric traits were all published in 2019 substantiating the rapidly evolving dissection of their polygenic basis: (a) for BMI, 941 near-independent genome-wide significant SNPs at 536 polygenic loci have been detected (Yengo et al, 2018). (b) A GWAS for whole-body lean body mass (LBM; adjusted for sex, age, and height with or without fat mass adjustments) revealed seven LBM loci (Karasik et al, 2019). Another very recent GWAS for the proportion of body fat distribution in arms, legs, and trunk on 362,499 individuals from the UK Biobank identified 98 independent loci, 29 of which had not previously been associated with anthropometric traits including BMI (Rask-Andersen et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Potential genes were obtained from the work of Zillikens [2], Karasik [1] for LM and for HG, Willems [3] and Tikkanen [10]. Genes provided by Karasik, Zillikens and Willems were graded as first tier genes, while genes provided by Tikkanen were graded as second tier genes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The results of GWAS for lean mass (LM) and hand grip strength (HG) was published in studies by Karasik et al,. [1], Zilikens et al [2], Willems et al [3] and Tikkanen et al [4], in various large human populations. The summary of eQTL data was obtained by studies by Westra et.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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