Inheritance of rare functional GCKR variants and their contribution to triglyceride levels in families

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Abstract

Significant resources have been invested in sequencing studies to investigate the role of rare variants in complex disease etiology. However, the diagnostic interpretation of individual rare variants remains a major challenge, and may require accurate variant functional classification and the collection of large numbers of variant carriers. Utilizing sequence data from 458 individuals with hypertriglyceridemia and 333 controls with normal plasma triglyceride levels, we investigated these issues using GCKR, encoding glucokinase regulatory protein. Eighteenrarenon-synonymousGCKRvariants identifiedin these 791 individuals werecomprehensively characterizedbya rangeof biochemicalandcell biological assays, includinganovel high-throughput-screeningbased approach capable of measuring all variant proteins simultaneously. Functionally deleterious variants were collectively associated with hypertriglyceridemia, but a range of in silico prediction algorithms showed little consistency between algorithms and poor agreement with functional data. We extended our study by obtaining sequence dataonfamilymembers; however, functional variants did not co-segregate with triglyceride levels. Therefore, despite evidence for their collective functional and clinical relevance, our results emphasize the low predictive value of rare GCKR variants in individuals and the complex heritability of lipid traits.

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Rees, M. G., Raimondo, A., Wang, J., Ban, M. R., Davis, M. I., Barrett, A., … Gloyn, A. L. (2014). Inheritance of rare functional GCKR variants and their contribution to triglyceride levels in families. Human Molecular Genetics, 23(20), 5570–5578. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddu269

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