TY - JOUR
T1 - A candidate gene association study on preterm delivery
T2 - Application of high-throughput genotyping technology and advanced statistical methods
AU - Hao, Ke
AU - Wang, Xiaobin
AU - Niu, Tianhua
AU - Xu, Xin
AU - Li, Ang
AU - Chang, Weili
AU - Wang, Lin
AU - Li, Guang
AU - Laird, Nan
AU - Xu, Xiping
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Boston University Medical Center preterm study advisory group, Drs Barry Zuckerman, Phillip Stubblefield, Paul Wise, Howard Bauchner, Jerome Klein, Milton Ketochuck, for their support and guidance throughout the study. We thank Dr Wing Hung Wong for his guidance throughout this work and his critical review of the manuscript. We thank Colleen Pearson and Katherine Ortiz for their effort in field data collection. We thank the nursing staff of Labor and Delivery at the Boston Medical Center for their assistance to our study. We thank Ann Ramsey for administrative support, and Lingling Fu and Qin Wang for data entry and management. This study was supported in part by grants 20-FY98-0701 and 20-FY02-56 from the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, USA; R01 HD41702 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; and R01ES11682, R21 ES11666, and ES-00002 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
PY - 2004/4/1
Y1 - 2004/4/1
N2 - Preterm delivery (PTD) is the leading cause of infant mortality and morbidity worldwide. The etiology of PTD is largely unknown but is believed to be complex, encompassing multiple genetic and environmental determinants. To date, reports of genetic studies on PTD are sparse. We conducted a large-scale case-control study exploring the associations of 426 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with PTD in 300 mothers with PTD and 458 mothers with term deliveries at the Boston Medical Center. Twenty-five candidate genes were included in the final haplotype analysis, and a significant association of F5 gene haplotype with PTD was revealed and remained significant after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing (P=0.025). We applied different statistical algorithms (both Gibbs sampling and expectation-maximization) in reconstructing haplotype phases and different tests (both likelihood ratio test and permutation test) in association analyses, and all yielded similar results. We also performed exploratory ethnicity-specific analyses, which confirmed the consistent findings of the F5 gene across the ethnic groups. Moreover, IL1R2 (P=0.002 in Blacks), NOS2A (P < 0.001 in Whites) and OPRM1 (P=0.004 in Hispanics) gene haplotypes were associated with PTD in specific ethnic groups but not at global significance level. In summary, our results underscore the potentially important role of F5 gene variants in the pathogenesis of PTD, and demonstrate the utility of high-throughput genotyping and a haplotype-based approach in dissecting genetic basis of complex traits.
AB - Preterm delivery (PTD) is the leading cause of infant mortality and morbidity worldwide. The etiology of PTD is largely unknown but is believed to be complex, encompassing multiple genetic and environmental determinants. To date, reports of genetic studies on PTD are sparse. We conducted a large-scale case-control study exploring the associations of 426 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with PTD in 300 mothers with PTD and 458 mothers with term deliveries at the Boston Medical Center. Twenty-five candidate genes were included in the final haplotype analysis, and a significant association of F5 gene haplotype with PTD was revealed and remained significant after Bonferroni correction for multiple testing (P=0.025). We applied different statistical algorithms (both Gibbs sampling and expectation-maximization) in reconstructing haplotype phases and different tests (both likelihood ratio test and permutation test) in association analyses, and all yielded similar results. We also performed exploratory ethnicity-specific analyses, which confirmed the consistent findings of the F5 gene across the ethnic groups. Moreover, IL1R2 (P=0.002 in Blacks), NOS2A (P < 0.001 in Whites) and OPRM1 (P=0.004 in Hispanics) gene haplotypes were associated with PTD in specific ethnic groups but not at global significance level. In summary, our results underscore the potentially important role of F5 gene variants in the pathogenesis of PTD, and demonstrate the utility of high-throughput genotyping and a haplotype-based approach in dissecting genetic basis of complex traits.
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U2 - 10.1093/hmg/ddh091
DO - 10.1093/hmg/ddh091
M3 - Article
C2 - 14976157
AN - SCOPUS:11144355082
SN - 0964-6906
VL - 13
SP - 683
EP - 691
JO - Human molecular genetics
JF - Human molecular genetics
IS - 7
ER -