Parity modifies the effect of genetic variants associated with gestational duration and birth weight.

Karin Ytterberg, Hedvig Sundelin, Julius Juodakis, Marc Vaudel, Elizabeth C Corfield, Ole A Andreassen, Per Magnus, Alexandra Havdahl, Staffan Nilsson, Pål R Njolstad, Stefan Johansson, Bo Jacobsson, Pol Solé-Navais
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Abstract

Gestational duration and birth weight are linked to both short- and long-term adverse health outcomes in mothers and their offspring. Previous genome-wide association studies on these pregnancy outcomes have been successful but have overlooked the number of a mother's previous pregnancies. In this study, we explored if parity (the number of children a mother has previously delivered) modifies the maternal or foetal genetic effect of gestational duration and birth weight (gene × parity interactions) using data from the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort Study in up to 58,528 mothers and their offspring. Potential genetic effect differences were investigated by: (1) performing parity-stratified genome-wide association studies, (2) testing SNP × parity interactions, (3) testing the interaction between a polygenic prediction of the traits and parity, and (4) assessing the genetic correlation within each outcome across parity. For both phenotypes, we identified shared and distinct loci for each outcome in terms both of genetic region and number in the parity-stratified genome-wide association studies, and the genetic correlation by parity deviated from one for all outcomes. The strongest evidence of genetic modification effect by parity was found for gestational duration in the maternal genome where genetic effects were stronger in the first pregnancy compared to later pregnancies. For instance, the polygenic prediction of the maternal genome on gestational duration had a significant interaction with parity (p-value interaction = 5 × 10-5). The results for birth weight were more uncertain, suggesting that the identified gene × parity interactions is largely limited to gestational duration. In conclusion, our study reveals that parity modifies the genetic effects on gestational duration and highlights the relevance of considering parity in genetic studies on pregnancy outcomes.

胎次改变了与妊娠期和出生体重相关的遗传变异的影响。
妊娠期和出生体重与母亲及其后代的短期和长期不良健康结果有关。之前对这些怀孕结果的全基因组关联研究已经取得了成功,但忽略了母亲以前怀孕的次数。在这项研究中,我们利用挪威母亲、父亲和儿童队列研究中58,528名母亲及其后代的数据,探讨胎次(母亲以前分娩的孩子数量)是否会改变妊娠期和出生体重(基因×胎次相互作用)的母体或胎儿遗传效应。潜在的遗传效应差异通过:(1)进行胎次分层全基因组关联研究,(2)检测SNP与胎次的相互作用,(3)检测性状的多基因预测与胎次之间的相互作用,以及(4)评估胎次之间每个结果的遗传相关性。对于这两种表型,我们在胎次分层全基因组关联研究中根据遗传区域和数量确定了每个结果的共享和独特的基因座,并且胎次的遗传相关性偏离了所有结果。胎次对基因修饰影响的最有力证据是在母体基因组的妊娠持续时间中发现的,其中第一次怀孕的遗传影响比后来的怀孕更强。例如,母体基因组对妊娠期的多基因预测与胎次有显著的交互作用(p值交互作用= 5 × 10 -5)。出生体重的结果更不确定,这表明已确定的基因与胎次的相互作用在很大程度上仅限于妊娠期。总之,我们的研究表明胎次改变了遗传对妊娠持续时间的影响,并强调了在妊娠结局的遗传研究中考虑胎次的相关性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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