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Research work
Genome-wide meta-analysis of muscle weakness identifies 15 susceptibility loci in older men and women
Authors
Cheryl L. Ackert-Bicknell
Dan E. Arking
+25 more
Janice L. Atkins
Mary L. Biggs
Eric Boerwinkle
Ryan Cvejkus
ThuyVy Duong
Sahar Ghasemi
Shengjun Hong
Garan Jones
Erika Kague
Chia-Ling Kuo
Joshua R. Lewis
Jian’an Luan
Kathryn L. Lunetta
Maria Nethander
Adam J. Santanasto
Chloe Sarnowski
Kamil Sicinski
Najada Stringa
Toshiko Tanaka
Katerina Trajanoska
Stefan Walter
B. Gwen Windham
Mary K. Wojczynski
Jingyun Yang
M. Carola Zillikens
Publication date
1 January 2021
Publisher
Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia
Abstract
© 2021, The Author(s). Low muscle strength is an important heritable indicator of poor health linked to morbidity and mortality in older people. In a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of 256, 523 Europeans aged 60 years and over from 22 cohorts we identify 15 loci associated with muscle weakness (European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People definition: n = 48,596 cases, 18.9% of total), including 12 loci not implicated in previous analyses of continuous measures of grip strength. Loci include genes reportedly involved in autoimmune disease (HLA-DQA1p = 4 × 10−17), arthritis (GDF5p = 4 × 10−13), cell cycle control and cancer protection, regulation of transcription, and others involved in the development and maintenance of the musculoskeletal system. Using Mendelian randomization we report possible overlapping causal pathways, including diabetes susceptibility, haematological parameters, and the immune system. We conclude that muscle weakness in older adults has distinct mechanisms from continuous strength, including several pathways considered to be hallmarks of ageing
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Last time updated on 03/03/2021