Metabolites are small intermediate products of cellular metabolism perturbed in a variety of complex disorders. Identifying genetic markers associated with metabolite concentrations could delineate disease-related metabolic pathways in humans. We… Click to show full abstract
Metabolites are small intermediate products of cellular metabolism perturbed in a variety of complex disorders. Identifying genetic markers associated with metabolite concentrations could delineate disease-related metabolic pathways in humans. We tested genetic variants for associations with 136 metabolites in 1,954 Chinese from Singapore. At a conservative genome-wide threshold (3.7 x 10-10), we detected 1,899 variant-metabolite associations at 16 genetic loci. Three loci (ABCA7, A4GALT, GSTM2) represented novel associations with metabolites, with the strongest association observed between ABCA7 and d18:1/24:1 dihexosylceramide. Among 13 replicated loci, we identified six new variants independent of previously reported metabolite or lipid signals. We observed variant-metabolite associations at two loci (ABCA7, CHCHD2) that have been linked to neurodegenerative diseases. At SGPP1 and SPTLC3 loci, genetic variants showed preferential selectivity for sphingolipids with d16 (rather than d18) sphingosine backbone, including sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P). Our results provide new genetic associations for metabolites and highlight the role of metabolites as intermediate modulators in disease metabolic pathways.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.