Elsevier, Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases, (57), p. 50-53, 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcmd.2015.12.002
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A genome-wide association study was performed in 1,130 premenopausal women to detect common variants associated with three serum iron-related phenotypes. Total iron binding capacity was strongly associated (p=10−14) with variants in and near the TF gene (transferrin), the serum iron transporting protein, and with variants in HFE (p= 4×10−7), which encodes the human hemochromatosis gene. Association was also detected between percent iron saturation (p=10−8) and variants in the chromosome 6 region containing both HFE and SLC17A2, which encodes a phosphate transport protein. No significant associations were detected with serum iron, but variants in HFE were suggestive (p=10−6). Our results corroborate prior studies in older subjects and demonstrate that the association of these genetic variants with iron phenotypes can be detected in premenopausal women.