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Dive into the research topics where Struan F. A. Grant is active.

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Featured researches published by Struan F. A. Grant.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Variant of transcription factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2) gene confers risk of type 2 diabetes

Struan F. A. Grant; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Inga Reynisdottir; Rafil Benediktsson; Andrei Manolescu; Jesus Sainz; Agnar Helgason; Hreinn Stefansson; Valur Emilsson; Anna Helgadottir; Unnur Styrkarsdottir; Kristinn P. Magnusson; G. Bragi Walters; Ebba Palsdottir; Thorbjorg Jonsdottir; Thorunn Gudmundsdottir; Arnaldur Gylfason; Jona Saemundsdottir; Robert L. Wilensky; Muredach P. Reilly; Daniel J. Rader; Yu Z. Bagger; Claus Christiansen; Vilmundur Gudnason; Gunnar Sigurdsson; Unnur Thorsteinsdottir; Jeffrey R. Gulcher; Augustine Kong; Kari Stefansson

We have previously reported suggestive linkage of type 2 diabetes mellitus to chromosome 10q. We genotyped 228 microsatellite markers in Icelandic individuals with type 2 diabetes and controls throughout a 10.5-Mb interval on 10q. A microsatellite, DG10S478, within intron 3 of the transcription factor 7–like 2 gene (TCF7L2; formerly TCF4) was associated with type 2 diabetes (P = 2.1 × 10−9). This was replicated in a Danish cohort (P = 4.8 × 10−3) and in a US cohort (P = 3.3 × 10−9). Compared with non-carriers, heterozygous and homozygous carriers of the at-risk alleles (38% and 7% of the population, respectively) have relative risks of 1.45 and 2.41. This corresponds to a population attributable risk of 21%. The TCF7L2 gene product is a high mobility group box–containing transcription factor previously implicated in blood glucose homeostasis. It is thought to act through regulation of proglucagon gene expression in enteroendocrine cells via the Wnt signaling pathway.


Nature | 2009

Autism genome-wide copy number variation reveals ubiquitin and neuronal genes

Joseph T. Glessner; Kai Wang; Guiqing Cai; Olena Korvatska; Cecilia E. Kim; Shawn Wood; Haitao Zhang; Annette Estes; Camille W. Brune; Jonathan P. Bradfield; Marcin Imielinski; Edward C. Frackelton; Jennifer Reichert; Emily L. Crawford; Jeffrey Munson; Patrick Sleiman; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Kiran Annaiah; Kelly Thomas; Cuiping Hou; Wendy Glaberson; James H. Flory; Frederick G. Otieno; Maria Garris; Latha Soorya; Lambertus Klei; Joseph Piven; Kacie J. Meyer; Evdokia Anagnostou; Takeshi Sakurai

Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are childhood neurodevelopmental disorders with complex genetic origins. Previous studies focusing on candidate genes or genomic regions have identified several copy number variations (CNVs) that are associated with an increased risk of ASDs. Here we present the results from a whole-genome CNV study on a cohort of 859 ASD cases and 1,409 healthy children of European ancestry who were genotyped with ∼550,000 single nucleotide polymorphism markers, in an attempt to comprehensively identify CNVs conferring susceptibility to ASDs. Positive findings were evaluated in an independent cohort of 1,336 ASD cases and 1,110 controls of European ancestry. Besides previously reported ASD candidate genes, such as NRXN1 (ref. 10) and CNTN4 (refs 11, 12), several new susceptibility genes encoding neuronal cell-adhesion molecules, including NLGN1 and ASTN2, were enriched with CNVs in ASD cases compared to controls (P = 9.5 × 10-3). Furthermore, CNVs within or surrounding genes involved in the ubiquitin pathways, including UBE3A, PARK2, RFWD2 and FBXO40, were affected by CNVs not observed in controls (P = 3.3 × 10-3). We also identified duplications 55 kilobases upstream of complementary DNA AK123120 (P = 3.6 × 10-6). Although these variants may be individually rare, they target genes involved in neuronal cell-adhesion or ubiquitin degradation, indicating that these two important gene networks expressed within the central nervous system may contribute to the genetic susceptibility of ASD.


Nature Genetics | 2004

The gene encoding 5-lipoxygenase activating protein confers risk of myocardial infarction and stroke.

Anna Helgadottir; Andrei Manolescu; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Solveig Gretarsdottir; Helga Jonsdottir; Unnur Thorsteinsdottir; Nilesh J. Samani; Gudmundur Gudmundsson; Struan F. A. Grant; Gudmundur Thorgeirsson; Sigurlaug Sveinbjörnsdóttir; Einar M Valdimarsson; Stefan E. Matthiasson; Halldor Johannsson; Olof Gudmundsdottir; Mark E. Gurney; Jesus Sainz; Margret Thorhallsdottir; Margret B. Andresdottir; Michael L. Frigge; Eric J. Topol; Augustine Kong; Vilmundur Gudnason; Hakon Hakonarson; Jeffrey R. Gulcher; Kari Stefansson

We mapped a gene predisposing to myocardial infarction to a locus on chromosome 13q12–13. A four-marker single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) haplotype in this locus spanning the gene ALOX5AP encoding 5-lipoxygenase activating protein (FLAP) is associated with a two times greater risk of myocardial infarction in Iceland. This haplotype also confers almost two times greater risk of stroke. Another ALOX5AP haplotype is associated with myocardial infarction in individuals from the UK. Stimulated neutrophils from individuals with myocardial infarction produce more leukotriene B4, a key product in the 5-lipoxygenase pathway, than do neutrophils from controls, and this difference is largely attributed to cells from males who carry the at-risk haplotype. We conclude that variants of ALOX5AP are involved in the pathogenesis of both myocardial infarction and stroke by increasing leukotriene production and inflammation in the arterial wall.


Nature | 2009

Common genetic variants on 5p14.1 associate with autism spectrum disorders

Kai Wang; Haitao Zhang; Deqiong Ma; Maja Bucan; Joseph T. Glessner; Brett S. Abrahams; Daria Salyakina; Marcin Imielinski; Jonathan P. Bradfield; Patrick Sleiman; Cecilia E. Kim; Cuiping Hou; Edward C. Frackelton; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Nagahide Takahashi; Takeshi Sakurai; Eric Rappaport; Clara M. Lajonchere; Jeffrey Munson; Annette Estes; Olena Korvatska; Joseph Piven; Lisa I. Sonnenblick; Ana I. Alvarez Retuerto; Edward I. Herman; Hongmei Dong; Ted Hutman; Marian Sigman; Sally Ozonoff; Ami Klin

Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) represent a group of childhood neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders characterized by deficits in verbal communication, impairment of social interaction, and restricted and repetitive patterns of interests and behaviour. To identify common genetic risk factors underlying ASDs, here we present the results of genome-wide association studies on a cohort of 780 families (3,101 subjects) with affected children, and a second cohort of 1,204 affected subjects and 6,491 control subjects, all of whom were of European ancestry. Six single nucleotide polymorphisms between cadherin 10 (CDH10) and cadherin 9 (CDH9)—two genes encoding neuronal cell-adhesion molecules—revealed strong association signals, with the most significant SNP being rs4307059 (P = 3.4 × 10-8, odds ratio = 1.19). These signals were replicated in two independent cohorts, with combined P values ranging from 7.4 × 10-8 to 2.1 × 10-10. Our results implicate neuronal cell-adhesion molecules in the pathogenesis of ASDs, and represent, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of genome-wide significant association of common variants with susceptibility to ASDs.


Nature | 2007

A genome-wide association study identifies KIAA0350 as a type 1 diabetes gene.

Hakon Hakonarson; Struan F. A. Grant; Jonathan P. Bradfield; Luc Marchand; Cecilia E. Kim; Joseph T. Glessner; Rosemarie Grabs; Tracy Casalunovo; Shayne Taback; Edward C. Frackelton; Margaret L. Lawson; Luke J. Robinson; Robert Skraban; Yang Lu; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Charles A. Stanley; Susan E. Kirsch; Eric Rappaport; Jordan S. Orange; Dimitri Monos; Marcella Devoto; Hui Qi Qu; Constantin Polychronakos

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in children results from autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells, leading to insufficient production of insulin. A number of genetic determinants of T1D have already been established through candidate gene studies, primarily within the major histocompatibility complex but also within other loci. To identify new genetic factors that increase the risk of T1D, we performed a genome-wide association study in a large paediatric cohort of European descent. In addition to confirming previously identified loci, we found that T1D was significantly associated with variation within a 233-kb linkage disequilibrium block on chromosome 16p13. This region contains KIAA0350, the gene product of which is predicted to be a sugar-binding, C-type lectin. Three common non-coding variants of the gene (rs2903692, rs725613 and rs17673553) in strong linkage disequilibrium reached genome-wide significance for association with T1D. A subsequent transmission disequilibrium test replication study in an independent cohort confirmed the association. These results indicate that KIAA0350 might be involved in the pathogenesis of T1D and demonstrate the utility of the genome-wide association approach in the identification of previously unsuspected genetic determinants of complex traits.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998

Relation of alleles of the collagen type Iα1 gene to bone density and the risk of osteoporotic fractures in postmenopausal women

André G. Uitterlinden; Huibert Burger; Qiuju Huang; Fang Yue; Fiona McGuigan; Struan F. A. Grant; Huib Pols; Stuart H. Ralston; Hans van Leeuwen; Albert Hofman

BACKGROUND Osteoporosis is a common disorder with a strong genetic component. One way in which the genetic component could be expressed is through polymorphism of COLIA1, the gene for collagen type Ialpha1, a bone-matrix protein. METHODS We determined the COLIA1 genotypes SS, Ss, and ss in a population-based sample of 1778 postmenopausal women using a polymerase-chain-reaction-based assay. We then related the genotypes to bone mineral density and the occurrence of osteoporotic fractures in these women. RESULTS As compared with the 1194 women with the SS genotype, the 526 women with the Ss genotype had 2 percent lower bone mineral density at the femoral neck (P=0.003) and the lumbar spine (P=0.02); the 58 women with the ss genotype had reductions of 4 percent at the femoral neck (P= 0.05) and 6 percent at the lumbar spine (P=0.005). These differences increased with age (P=0.01 for modification by age of the effect of COLIA1 on femoral-neck bone density, and P=0.004 for modification of the effect on lumbar-spine bone density). Women with the Ss and ss genotypes were overrepresented among the 111 women who had incident nonvertebral fractures (relative risk per copy of the s allele, 1.5; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.1 to 2.1). CONCLUSIONS The COLIA1 polymorphism is associated with reduced bone density and predisposes women to osteoporotic fractures.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Refining the impact of TCF7L2 gene variants on type 2 diabetes and adaptive evolution

Agnar Helgason; Snæbjörn Pálsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Struan F. A. Grant; Valur Emilsson; Steinunn Gunnarsdottir; Adebowale Adeyemo; Yuanxiu Chen; Guanjie Chen; Inga Reynisdottir; Rafn Benediktsson; Anke Hinney; Torben Hansen; Gitte Andersen; Knut Borch-Johnsen; Torben Jørgensen; Helmut Schäfer; Mezbah U. Faruque; Ayo Doumatey; Jie Zhou; Robert L. Wilensky; Muredach P. Reilly; Daniel J. Rader; Yu Z. Bagger; Claus Christiansen; Gunnar Sigurdsson; Johannes Hebebrand; Oluf Pedersen; Unnur Thorsteinsdottir; Jeffrey R. Gulcher

We recently described an association between risk of type 2diabetes and variants in the transcription factor 7-like 2 gene (TCF7L2; formerly TCF4), with a population attributable risk (PAR) of 17%–28% in three populations of European ancestry. Here, we refine the definition of the TCF7L2 type 2diabetes risk variant, HapBT2D, to the ancestral T allele of a SNP, rs7903146, through replication in West African and Danish type 2 diabetes case-control studies and an expanded Icelandic study. We also identify another variant of the same gene, HapA, that shows evidence of positive selection in East Asian, European and West African populations. Notably, HapA shows a suggestive association with body mass index and altered concentrations of the hunger-satiety hormones ghrelin and leptin in males, indicating that the selective advantage of HapA may have been mediated through effects on energy metabolism.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Concept, design and implementation of a cardiovascular gene-centric 50 k SNP array for large-scale genomic association studies.

Brendan J. Keating; Sam E. Tischfield; Sarah S. Murray; Tushar Bhangale; Thomas S. Price; Joseph T. Glessner; Luana Galver; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Struan F. A. Grant; Deborah N. Farlow; Hareesh R. Chandrupatla; Mark Hansen; Saad Ajmal; George J. Papanicolaou; Yiran Guo; Mingyao Li; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Swneke D. Bailey; Alexandre Montpetit; Andrew C. Edmondson; Kent D. Taylor; Xiaowu Gai; Susanna S. Wang; Myriam Fornage; Tamim H. Shaikh; Leif Groop; Michael Boehnke; Alistair S. Hall; Andrew T. Hattersley; Edward C. Frackelton

A wealth of genetic associations for cardiovascular and metabolic phenotypes in humans has been accumulating over the last decade, in particular a large number of loci derived from recent genome wide association studies (GWAS). True complex disease-associated loci often exert modest effects, so their delineation currently requires integration of diverse phenotypic data from large studies to ensure robust meta-analyses. We have designed a gene-centric 50 K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array to assess potentially relevant loci across a range of cardiovascular, metabolic and inflammatory syndromes. The array utilizes a “cosmopolitan” tagging approach to capture the genetic diversity across ∼2,000 loci in populations represented in the HapMap and SeattleSNPs projects. The array content is informed by GWAS of vascular and inflammatory disease, expression quantitative trait loci implicated in atherosclerosis, pathway based approaches and comprehensive literature searching. The custom flexibility of the array platform facilitated interrogation of loci at differing stringencies, according to a gene prioritization strategy that allows saturation of high priority loci with a greater density of markers than the existing GWAS tools, particularly in African HapMap samples. We also demonstrate that the IBC array can be used to complement GWAS, increasing coverage in high priority CVD-related loci across all major HapMap populations. DNA from over 200,000 extensively phenotyped individuals will be genotyped with this array with a significant portion of the generated data being released into the academic domain facilitating in silico replication attempts, analyses of rare variants and cross-cohort meta-analyses in diverse populations. These datasets will also facilitate more robust secondary analyses, such as explorations with alternative genetic models, epistasis and gene-environment interactions.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2010

Rare structural variants found in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder are preferentially associated with neurodevelopmental genes.

Josephine Elia; Xiaowu Gai; Hongbo M. Xie; Juan C. Perin; Elizabeth A. Geiger; Joe Glessner; M. D'Arcy; Rachel deBerardinis; Edward C. Frackelton; Cecilia Kim; Francesca Lantieri; B M Muganga; Li-San Wang; Toshinobu Takeda; Eric Rappaport; Struan F. A. Grant; Wade H. Berrettini; Marcella Devoto; Tamim H. Shaikh; Hakon Hakonarson; Peter S. White

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common and highly heritable disorder, but specific genetic factors underlying risk remain elusive. To assess the role of structural variation in ADHD, we identified 222 inherited copy number variations (CNVs) within 335 ADHD patients and their parents that were not detected in 2026 unrelated healthy individuals. Although no excess CNVs, either deletions or duplications, were found in the ADHD cohort relative to controls, the inherited rare CNV-associated gene set was significantly enriched for genes reported as candidates in studies of autism, schizophrenia and Tourette syndrome, including A2BP1, AUTS2, CNTNAP2 and IMMP2L. The ADHD CNV gene set was also significantly enriched for genes known to be important for psychological and neurological functions, including learning, behavior, synaptic transmission and central nervous system development. Four independent deletions were located within the protein tyrosine phosphatase gene, PTPRD, recently implicated as a candidate gene for restless legs syndrome, which frequently presents with ADHD. A deletion within the glutamate receptor gene, GRM5, was found in an affected parent and all three affected offspring whose ADHD phenotypes closely resembled those of the GRM5 null mouse. Together, these results suggest that rare inherited structural variations play an important role in ADHD development and indicate a set of putative candidate genes for further study in the etiology of ADHD.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Common variants at five new loci associated with early-onset inflammatory bowel disease

Marcin Imielinski; Robert N. Baldassano; Anne M. Griffiths; Richard K. Russell; Vito Annese; Marla Dubinsky; Subra Kugathasan; Jonathan P. Bradfield; Thomas D. Walters; Patrick Sleiman; Cecilia E. Kim; Aleixo M. Muise; Kai Wang; Joseph T. Glessner; Shehzad A. Saeed; Haitao Zhang; Edward C. Frackelton; Cuiping Hou; James H. Flory; George Otieno; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Robert W. Grundmeier; M. Castro; Anna Latiano; Bruno Dallapiccola; Joanne M. Stempak; Debra J. Abrams; Kent D. Taylor; Dermot McGovern; Melvin B. Heyman

The inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis are common causes of morbidity in children and young adults in the western world. Here we report the results of a genome-wide association study in early-onset IBD involving 3,426 affected individuals and 11,963 genetically matched controls recruited through international collaborations in Europe and North America, thereby extending the results from a previous study of 1,011 individuals with early-onset IBD. We have identified five new regions associated with early-onset IBD susceptibility, including 16p11 near the cytokine gene IL27 (rs8049439, P = 2.41 × 10−9), 22q12 (rs2412973, P = 1.55 × 10−9), 10q22 (rs1250550, P = 5.63 × 10−9), 2q37 (rs4676410, P = 3.64 × 10−8) and 19q13.11 (rs10500264, P = 4.26 × 10−10). Our scan also detected associations at 23 of 32 loci previously implicated in adult-onset Crohns disease and at 8 of 17 loci implicated in adult-onset ulcerative colitis, highlighting the close pathogenetic relationship between early- and adult-onset IBD.

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Hakon Hakonarson

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Jonathan P. Bradfield

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Joseph T. Glessner

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Edward C. Frackelton

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Rosetta M. Chiavacci

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Alessandra Chesi

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Cecilia E. Kim

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Haitao Zhang

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Mingyao Li

University of Pennsylvania

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Patrick Sleiman

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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