Red blood cell distribution width: Genetic evidence for aging pathways in 116,666 volunteers
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-25, 15:49 authored by L.C. Pilling, J.L. Atkins, M.O. Duff, R.N. Beaumont, S.E. Jones, J. Tyrrell, C.-L. Kuo, K.S. Ruth, M.A. Tuke, Hanieh Yaghootkar, A.R. Wood, A. Murray, M.N. Weedon, L.W. Harries, G.A. Kuchel, L. Ferrucci, T.M. Frayling, D. Melzer<p>Introduction: Variability in red blood cell volumes (distribution width, RDW) increases with age and is strongly predictive of mortality, incident coronary heart disease and cancer. We investigated inherited genetic variation associated with RDW in 116,666 UK Biobank human volunteers. Results: A large proportion RDW is explained by genetic variants (29%), especially in the older group (60+ year olds, 33.8%, <50 year olds, 28.4%). RDW was associated with 194 independent genetic signals; 71 are known for conditions including autoimmune disease, certain cancers, BMI, Alzheimer’s disease, longevity, age at menopause, bone density, myositis, Parkinson’s disease, and age-related macular degeneration. Exclusion of anemic participants did not affect the overall findings. Pathways analysis showed enrichment for telomere maintenance, ribosomal RNA, and apoptosis. The majority of RDW-associated signals were intronic (119 of 194), including SNP rs6602909 located in an intron of oncogene GAS6, an eQTL in whole blood. Conclusions: Although increased RDW is predictive of cardiovascular outcomes, this was not explained by known CVD or related lipid genetic risks, and a RDW genetic score was not predictive of incident disease. The predictive value of RDW for a range of negative health outcomes may in part be due to variants influencing fundamental pathways of aging. © 2017 Pilling et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- School of Chemistry (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
PLoS ONEVolume
12Issue
9Publisher
Public Library of ScienceExternal DOI
ISSN
19326203Date Accepted
2017-09-06Usage metrics
Keywords
AdultAgedAgingBiological Specimen BanksErythrocyte IndicesFemaleGene OntologyGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenetic VariationGenome-Wide Association StudyGenotypeHealthy VolunteersHumansMaleMiddle AgedSignal TransductionUnited Kingdomgrowth arrest specific protein 6ribosome RNAadultage distributionage related macular degenerationagedagingAlzheimer diseaseapoptosisArticleautoimmune diseasebiobankbody massbone densitycardiovascular riskcontrolled studyfemaleGAS6 genegenetic riskgenetic variationgenome-wide association studygenotypehumanhuman cellintronlongevitymajor clinical studymalemalignant neoplasmmenopausemyositisoncogeneParkinson diseasepredictive valuered blood cell distribution widthsingle nucleotide polymorphismtelomere homeostasisbloodgene ontologygenetic predispositiongeneticsmean corpuscular volumemiddle agednormal humansignal transduction
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