Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-1-2005
Abstract
The most efficient study design to map genes underlying complex traits will be determined by assumptions about whether the genetic effects are likely to be due to relatively few common variants or multiple rare variants. To examine the possibility that rare variants may influence blood pressure, we sequenced a 6.8 kb region of the angiotensinogen (AGT) gene in 29 male Nigerians with high plasma AGT levels and 28 with low levels. The frequency of haplotypes produced from rare variants in the promoter and coding regions was significantly different between the two groups, and it is unlikely that this difference was due to the manner in which the rare variants were selected. Further analysis suggested that most of the haplotypes produced by these rare variants are found on a haplotype background created by three common SNPs. Our study confirms in an additional trait that rare variants can influence the distribution of complex traits; whether these variants can be captured by common SNPs or haplotypes requires further investigation. © Oxford University Press 2005; all rights reserved.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Human Molecular Genetics
First Page
639
Last Page
643
Recommended Citation
Zhu, X., Fejerman, L., Luke, A., Adeyemo, A., & Cooper, R. (2005). Haplotypes produced from rare variants in the promoter and coding regions of angiotensinogen contribute to variation in angiotensinogen levels. Human Molecular Genetics, 14 (5), 639-643. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddi060