Betty M. Drees
University of Missouri–Kansas City
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Publication
Featured researches published by Betty M. Drees.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2007
Lan-Juan Zhao; Hui Jiang; Christopher J. Papasian; Dev Maulik; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Hong-Wen Deng
It was previously believed that obesity and osteoporosis were two unrelated diseases, but recent studies have shown that both diseases share several common genetic and environmental factors. Body fat mass, a component of body weight, is one of the most important indices of obesity, and a substantial body of evidence indicates that fat mass may have beneficial effects on bone. Contrasting studies, however, suggest that excessive fat mass may not protect against osteoporosis or osteoporotic fracture. Differences in experimental design, sample structure, and even the selection of covariates may account for some of these inconsistent or contradictory results. Despite the lack of a clear consensus regarding the impact of effects of fat on bone, a number of mechanistic explanations have been proposed to support the observed epidemiologic and physiologic associations between fat and bone. The common precursor stem cell that leads to the differentiation of both adipocytes and osteoblasts, as well the secretion of adipocyte‐derived hormones that affect bone development, may partially explain these associations. Based on our current state of knowledge, it is unclear whether fat has beneficial effects on bone. We anticipate that this will be an active and fruitful focus of research in the coming years.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2008
Yong Jun Liu; Xiao Gang Liu; Liang Wang; Christian Dina; Han Yan; Jianfeng Liu; Shawn Levy; Christopher J. Papasian; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; David Meyre; Jérôme Delplanque; Yu Fang Pei; Lei Zhang; Robert R. Recker; Philippe Froguel; Hong-Wen Deng
Obesity is a major public health problem with strong genetic determination; however, the genetic factors underlying obesity are largely unknown. In this study, we performed a genome-wide association scan for obesity by examining approximately 500 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a sample of 1000 unrelated US Caucasians. We identified a novel gene, CTNNBL1, which has multiple SNPs associated with body mass index (BMI) and fat mass. The most significant SNP, rs6013029, achieved experiment-wise P-values of 2.69 x 10(-7) for BMI and of 4.99 x 10(-8) for fat mass, respectively. The SNP rs6013029 minor allele T confers an average increase in BMI and fat mass of 2.67 kg/m(2) and 5.96 kg, respectively, compared with the alternative allele G. We further genotyped the five most significant CTNNBL1 SNPs in a French case-control sample comprising 896 class III obese adults (BMI > or = 40 kg/m(2)) and 2916 lean adults (BMI < 25 kg/m(2)). All five SNPs showed consistent associations with obesity (8.83 x 10(-3) < P < 6.96 x 10(-4)). Those subjects who were homozygous for the rs6013029 T allele had 1.42-fold increased odds of obesity compared with those without the T allele. The protein structure of CTNNBL1 is homologous to beta-catenin, a family of proteins containing armadillo repeats, suggesting similar biological functions. beta-Catenin is involved in the Wnt/beta-catenin-signaling pathway which appears to contribute to maintaining the undifferentiated state of pre-adipocytes by inhibiting adipogenic gene expression. Our study hence suggests a novel mechanism for the development of obesity, where CTNNBL1 may play an important role. Our study also provided supportive evidence for previously identified associations between obesity and INSIG2 and PFKP, but not FTO.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008
Tie-Lin Yang; Xiang Ding Chen; Yan Guo; Shu Feng Lei; Jin Tang Wang; Qi Zhou; Feng Pan; Yuan Chen; Zhi Xin Zhang; Shan Shan Dong; Xiang Hong Xu; Han Yan; Xiao-Gang Liu; Chuan Qiu; Xue Zhen Zhu; Teng Chen; Meng Li; Hong Zhang; Liang Zhang; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Christopher J. Papasian; Robert R. Recker; Xiao Ping Song; Jing Cheng; Hong-Wen Deng
Osteoporosis, a highly heritable disease, is characterized mainly by low bone-mineral density (BMD), poor bone geometry, and/or osteoporotic fractures (OF). Copy-number variation (CNV) has been shown to be associated with complex human diseases. The contribution of CNV to osteoporosis has not been determined yet. We conducted case-control genome-wide CNV analyses, using the Affymetrix 500K Array Set, in 700 elderly Chinese individuals comprising 350 cases with homogeneous hip OF and 350 matched controls. We constructed a genomic map containing 727 CNV regions in Chinese individuals. We found that CNV 4q13.2 was strongly associated with OF (p = 2.0 x 10(-4), Bonferroni-corrected p = 0.02, odds ratio = 1.73). Validation experiments using PCR and electrophoresis, as well as real-time PCR, further identified a deletion variant of UGT2B17 in CNV 4q13.2. Importantly, the association between CNV of UGT2B17 and OF was successfully replicated in an independent Chinese sample containing 399 cases with hip OF and 400 controls. We further examined this CNVs relevance to major risk factors for OF (i.e., hip BMD and femoral-neck bone geometry) in both Chinese (689 subjects) and white (1000 subjects) samples and found consistently significant results (p = 5.0 x 10(-4) -0.021). Because UGT2B17 encodes an enzyme catabolizing steroid hormones, we measured the concentrations of serum testosterone and estradiol for 236 young Chinese males and assessed their UGT2B17 copy number. Subjects without UGT2B17 had significantly higher concentrations of testosterone and estradiol. Our findings suggest the important contribution of CNV of UGT2B17 to the pathogenesis of osteoporosis.
PLOS Genetics | 2010
Yan Guo; Li Jun Tan; Shu Feng Lei; Tie-Lin Yang; Xiang Ding Chen; Feng Zhang; Yuan Chen; Feng Pan; Han Yan; Xiao-Gang Liu; Qing Tian; Zhi Xin Zhang; Qi Zhou; Chuan Qiu; Shan Shan Dong; Xiang Hong Xu; Yan Fang Guo; Xue Zhen Zhu; Shan Lin Liu; Xiang Li Wang; Xi Li; Yi Luo; Li Shu Zhang; Meng Li; Jin Tang Wang; Ting Wen; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Christopher J. Papasian; Robert R. Recker
Osteoporosis is a major public health problem. It is mainly characterized by low bone mineral density (BMD) and/or low-trauma osteoporotic fractures (OF), both of which have strong genetic determination. The specific genes influencing these phenotypic traits, however, are largely unknown. Using the Affymetrix 500K array set, we performed a case-control genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 700 elderly Chinese Han subjects (350 with hip OF and 350 healthy matched controls). A follow-up replication study was conducted to validate our major GWAS findings in an independent Chinese sample containing 390 cases with hip OF and 516 controls. We found that a SNP, rs13182402 within the ALDH7A1 gene on chromosome 5q31, was strongly associated with OF with evidence combined GWAS and replication studies (P = 2.08×10−9, odds ratio = 2.25). In order to explore the target risk factors and potential mechanism underlying hip OF risk, we further examined this candidate SNPs relevance to hip BMD both in Chinese and Caucasian populations involving 9,962 additional subjects. This SNP was confirmed as consistently associated with hip BMD even across ethnic boundaries, in both Chinese and Caucasians (combined P = 6.39×10−6), further attesting to its potential effect on osteoporosis. ALDH7A1 degrades and detoxifies acetaldehyde, which inhibits osteoblast proliferation and results in decreased bone formation. Our findings may provide new insights into the pathogenesis of osteoporosis.
The Journal of Urology | 2000
Peter J. Van Veldhuizen; Sarah A. Taylor; Stephen Williamson; Betty M. Drees
PURPOSE We performed a phase II study to determine whether pain associated with prostate cancer bone metastasis would respond to vitamin D replacement and parameters of muscle strength would be improved by vitamin D replacement therapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS After a 4-week placebo period, eligible patients received orally 2,000 units vitamin D daily for 12 weeks. Pain questionnaires and measurements of muscle strength were competed at study enrollment and every 4 weeks thereafter. Serum calcium and vitamin D were measured at each clinic visit. RESULTS A total of 16 patients with advanced hormone refractory prostate cancer were enrolled in this phase II study, of whom 7 (44%) had decreased baseline vitamin D. With vitamin D treatment, 4 patients (25%) had improvement in pain scores and 6 (37%) had improvement in muscle strength measurements. Improvement in pain scores correlated with improvement in subjective symptoms but did not result in a significant decrease in regular scheduled analgesic requirements. CONCLUSIONS Vitamin D deficiency develops in a significant percent of patients with advanced hormone refractory prostate cancer. Supplementation with vitamin D may be a useful adjunct for improving pain, muscle strength and quality of life in this patient population.
PLOS Genetics | 2009
Yao Zhong Liu; Yan Fang Guo; Liang Wang; Li Jun Tan; Xiao Gang Liu; Yu Fang Pei; Han Yan; Dong Hai Xiong; Fei-Yan Deng; Na Yu; Yin Ping Zhang; Lei Zhang; Shu Feng Lei; Xiang Ding Chen; Hongbin Liu; Xue Zhen Zhu; Shawn Levy; Christopher J. Papasian; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Robert R. Recker; Hong-Wen Deng
For females, menarche is a most significant physiological event. Age at menarche (AAM) is a trait with high genetic determination and is associated with major complex diseases in women. However, specific genes for AAM variation are largely unknown. To identify genetic factors underlying AAM variation, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) examining about 380,000 SNPs was conducted in 477 Caucasian women. A follow-up replication study was performed to validate our major GWAS findings using two independent Caucasian cohorts with 854 siblings and 762 unrelated subjects, respectively, and one Chinese cohort of 1,387 unrelated subjects—all females. Our GWAS identified a novel gene, SPOCK (Sparc/Osteonectin, CWCV, and Kazal-like domains proteoglycan), which had seven SNPs associated with AAM with genome-wide false discovery rate (FDR) q<0.05. Six most significant SNPs of the gene were selected for validation in three independent replication cohorts. All of the six SNPs were replicated in at least one cohort. In particular, SNPs rs13357391 and rs1859345 were replicated both within and across different ethnic groups in all three cohorts, with p values of 5.09×10−3 and 4.37×10−3, respectively, in the Chinese cohort and combined p values (obtained by Fishers method) of 5.19×10−5 and 1.02×10−4, respectively, in all three replication cohorts. Interestingly, SPOCK can inhibit activation of MMP-2 (matrix metalloproteinase-2), a key factor promoting endometrial menstrual breakdown and onset of menstrual bleeding. Our findings, together with the functional relevance, strongly supported that the SPOCK gene underlies variation of AAM.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Jian Li; Tie-Lin Yang; Liang Wang; Han Yan; Yinping Zhang; Yan Guo; Feng Pan; Z. Q. Zhang; Yumei Peng; Qi Zhou; Lina He; Xue-Zhen Zhu; H.-W. Deng; Shawn Levy; Christopher J. Papasian; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Robert R. Recker; Jing Cheng; Hong-Wen Deng
Although copy number variation (CNV) has recently received much attention as a form of structure variation within the human genome, knowledge is still inadequate on fundamental CNV characteristics such as occurrence rate, genomic distribution and ethnic differentiation. In the present study, we used the Affymetrix GeneChip® Mapping 500K Array to discover and characterize CNVs in the human genome and to study ethnic differences of CNVs between Caucasians and Asians. Three thousand and nineteen CNVs, including 2381 CNVs in autosomes and 638 CNVs in X chromosome, from 985 Caucasian and 692 Asian individuals were identified, with a mean length of 296 kb. Among these CNVs, 190 had frequencies greater than 1% in at least one ethnic group, and 109 showed significant ethnic differences in frequencies (p<0.01). After merging overlapping CNVs, 1135 copy number variation regions (CNVRs), covering approximately 439 Mb (14.3%) of the human genome, were obtained. Our findings of ethnic differentiation of CNVs, along with the newly constructed CNV genomic map, extend our knowledge on the structural variation in the human genome and may furnish a basis for understanding the genomic differentiation of complex traits across ethnic groups.
PLOS ONE | 2008
Yao Zhong Liu; Scott G. Wilson; Liang Wang; Xiao Gang Liu; Yan Fang Guo; Jian Li; Han Yan; Panos Deloukas; Nicole Soranzo; Usha Chinnapen-Horsley; Alesandra Cervino; Frances M. K. Williams; Dong Hai Xiong; Yin Ping Zhang; Tian Bo Jin; Shawn Levy; Christopher J. Papasian; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Robert R. Recker; Tim D. Spector; Hong-Wen Deng
Osteoporosis, the most prevalent metabolic bone disease among older people, increases risk for low trauma hip fractures (HF) that are associated with high morbidity and mortality. Hip bone size (BS) has been identified as one of the key measurable risk factors for HF. Although hip BS is highly genetically determined, genetic factors underlying the trait are still poorly defined. Here, we performed the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of hip BS interrogating ∼380,000 SNPs on the Affymetrix platform in 1,000 homogeneous unrelated Caucasian subjects, including 501 females and 499 males. We identified a gene, PLCL1 (phospholipase c-like 1), that had four SNPs associated with hip BS at, or approaching, a genome-wide significance level in our female subjects; the most significant SNP, rs7595412, achieved a p value of 3.72×10−7. The genes importance to hip BS was replicated using the Illumina genotyping platform in an independent UK cohort containing 1,216 Caucasian females. Two SNPs of the PLCL1 gene, rs892515 and rs9789480, surrounded by the four SNPs identified in our GWAS, achieved p values of 8.62×10−3 and 2.44×10−3, respectively, for association with hip BS. Imputation analyses on our GWAS and the UK samples further confirmed the replication signals; eight SNPs of the gene achieved combined imputed p values<10−5 in the two samples. The PLCL1 genes relevance to HF was also observed in a Chinese sample containing 403 females, including 266 with HF and 177 control subjects. A SNP of the PLCL1 gene, rs3771362 that is only ∼0.6 kb apart from the most significant SNP detected in our GWAS (rs7595412), achieved a p value of 7.66×10−3 (odds ratio = 0.26) for association with HF. Additional biological support for the role of PLCL1 in BS comes from previous demonstrations that the PLCL1 protein inhibits IP3 (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate)-mediated calcium signaling, an important pathway regulating mechanical sensing of bone cells. Our findings suggest that PLCL1 is a novel gene associated with variation in hip BS, and provide new insights into the pathogenesis of HF.
Annals of Human Genetics | 2008
Lina He; Yao-Zhong Liu; Peng Xiao; Lei Zhang; Yan Guo; Tie-Lin Yang; Lan Juan Zhao; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Hong Yi Deng; Robert R. Recker; H.-W. Deng
Traditional whole genome linkage scans for obesity were usually performed for a number of correlated obesity related phenotypes separately without considering their correlations. The purpose of this study was to identify quantitative trait loci (QTLs) underlying variations in multiple correlated obesity phenotypes.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2008
Xiao Gang Liu; Yong Jun Liu; Jianfeng Liu; Yu-Fang Pei; Dong Hai Xiong; Hui Shen; Hong Yi Deng; Christopher J. Papasian; Betty M. Drees; James J. Hamilton; Robert R. Recker; Hong-Wen Deng
Areal BMD (aBMD) and areal bone size (ABS) are biologically correlated traits and are each important determinants of bone strength and risk of fractures. Studies showed that aBMD and ABS are genetically correlated, indicating that they may share some common genetic factors, which, however, are largely unknown. To study the genetic factors influencing both aBMD and ABS, bivariate whole genome linkage analyses were conducted for aBMD‐ABS at the femoral neck (FN), lumbar spine (LS), and ultradistal (UD)‐forearm in a large sample of 451 white pedigrees made up of 4498 individuals. We detected significant linkage on chromosome Xq27 (LOD = 4.89) for LS aBMD‐ABS. In addition, we detected suggestive linkages at 20q11 (LOD = 3.65) and Xp11 (LOD = 2.96) for FN aBMD‐ABS; at 12p11 (LOD = 3.39) and 17q21 (LOD = 2.94) for LS aBMD‐ABS; and at 5q23 (LOD = 3.54), 7p15 (LOD = 3.45), Xq27 (LOD = 2.93), and 12p11 (LOD = 2.92) for UD‐forearm aBMD‐ABS. Subsequent discrimination analyses indicated that quantitative trait loci (QTLs) at 12p11 and 17q21 may have pleiotropic effects on aBMD and ABS. This study identified several genomic regions that may contain QTLs important for both aBMD and ABS. Further endeavors are necessary to follow these regions to eventually pinpoint the genetic variants affecting bone strength and risk of fractures.