Mendelian randomization analysis reveals a causal influence of circulating sclerostin levels on bone mineral density and fractures

  • Zheng, Jie
  • Maerz, Winfried
  • Gergei, Ingrid
  • Kleber, Marcus E.
  • Drechsler, Christiane
  • Wanner, Christoph
  • Brandenburg, Vincent
  • Reppe, Sjur
  • Gautvik, Kaare M.
  • Medina-Gomez, Carolina
  • Shevroja, Enisa
  • Gilly, Arthur
  • Park, Young-Chan
  • Dedoussis, George
  • Zeggini, Eleftheria
  • Lorentzon, Mattias
  • Henning, Petra
  • Lerner, Ulf H.
  • Nilsson, Karin H.
  • Moverare-Skrtic, Sofia
  • Baird, Denis
  • Elsworth, Benjamin
  • Falk, Louise
  • Groom, Alix
  • Capellini, Terence D.
  • Grundberg, Elin
  • Nethander, Maria
  • Ohlsson, Claes
  • Smith, George Davey
  • Tobias, Jonathan H.
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Publication date
January 2019
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English

Abstract

In bone, sclerostin is mainly osteocyte‐derived and plays an important local role in adaptive responses to mechanical loading. Whether circulating levels of sclerostin also play a functional role is currently unclear, which we aimed to examine by two‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR). A genetic instrument for circulating sclerostin, derived from a genomewide association study (GWAS) meta‐analysis of serum sclerostin in 10,584 European‐descent individuals, was examined in relation to femoral neck bone mineral density (BMD; n = 32,744) in GEFOS and estimated bone mineral density (eBMD) by heel ultrasound (n = 426,824) and fracture risk (n = 426,795) in UK Biobank. Our GWAS identified two novel serum sclerostin loci, B4GALNT3 (standard devia...

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