Common SNPs explain a large proportion of the heritability for human height

Date

2010

Authors

Yang, J.
Benyamin, B.
McEvoy, B.P.
Gordon, S.
Henders, A.K.
Nyholt, D.R.
Madden, P.A.
Heath, A.C.
Martin, N.G.
Montgomery, G.W.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Nature Genetics, 2010; 42(7):565-569

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

SNPs discovered by genome-wide association studies (GWASs) account for only a small fraction of the genetic variation of complex traits in human populations. Where is the remaining heritability? We estimated the proportion of variance for human height explained by 294,831 SNPs genotyped on 3,925 unrelated individuals using a linear model analysis, and validated the estimation method with simulations based on the observed genotype data. We show that 45% of variance can be explained by considering all SNPs simultaneously. Thus, most of the heritability is not missing but has not previously been detected because the individual effects are too small to pass stringent significance tests. We provide evidence that the remaining heritability is due to incomplete linkage disequilibrium between causal variants and genotyped SNPs, exacerbated by causal variants having lower minor allele frequency than the SNPs explored to date.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Link to a related website: http://europepmc.org/articles/pmc3232052?pdf=render, Open Access via Unpaywall

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2010 Nature America, Inc.

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record