Medical College of Wisconsin
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Vitamin D receptor gene polymorphisms are linked to and associated with adult height. J Med Genet 2005 Mar;42(3):228-34

Date

03/04/2005

Pubmed ID

15744036

Pubmed Central ID

PMC1736013

DOI

10.1136/jmg.2004.024083

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-15044357372 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   55 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene is important to human stature, as it mediates metabolic pathways, calcium homeostasis, and phosphate homeostasis, which influence growth.

METHODS: We examined the relationship between VDR and adult height in 1873 white subjects from 406 nuclear families. Four SNPs, namely -4817A/G at intron 1, FokI C/T at exon 2 start codon, BsmI A/G at intron 8, and TaqI T/C at exon 9 in VDR were tested for linkage and association with adult height variation by the program QTDT (quantitative transmission disequilibrium test). The bT haplotype of the BsmI and TaqI loci was further tested for its association with height in unrelated samples randomly chosen from the 406 nuclear families by traditional population association methods.

RESULTS: All four tested SNPs were linked to adult height. Within family associations with height were detected at BsmI and TaqI loci (p = 0.048 and 0.039, respectively). Analyses based on BsmI/TaqI haplotypes also revealed evidence for linkage (p = 0.05) and association (p = 0.001) with height. The bT haplotype was significantly associated with higher adult height (p = 0.033, within family association test). Such an association might be female specific and influenced by menstrual status.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results strongly suggest that VDR may be linked to and associated with adult height variation in white populations.

Author List

Xiong DH, Xu FH, Liu PY, Shen H, Long JR, Elze L, Recker RR, Deng HW



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Body Height
Female
Gene Frequency
Haplotypes
Humans
Linkage Disequilibrium
Male
Middle Aged
Nuclear Family
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Receptors, Calcitriol