Skip to main content
. 2017 Nov 1;43(3):564–570. doi: 10.1038/npp.2017.232

Table 2. Genotype Distributions of FKBP5 SNPs in Children.

  A a NAA NAa Naa MAF PHWP
rs10807151 A G 91 64 6 0.236 0.194
rs3800373 A C 76 72 13 0.304 0.476
rs7757037 A G 49 89 23 0.419 0.086
rs9296158 G A 73 74 14 0.317 0.433
rs3777747 G A 49 88 24 0.422 0.127
rs6926133 C A 89 64 8 0.248 0.413
rs9380524 C A 81 63 17 0.301 0.371
rs16879378 A C 159 2 0 0.006 0.937
rs1475774 G A 151 10 0 0.031 0.684
rs4713904 A G 78 70 13 0.298 0.622
rs9470080 G A 70 73 18 0.339 0.875
rs9380526 A G 69 74 18 0.342 0.782
rs10456432 A G 139 19 3 0.078 0.026
rs9380529 G A 57 81 23 0.394 0.500
rs9394314 A G 80 71 10 0.283 0.266
rs2766533 G A 61 80 20 0.373 0.426
rs12200498 G A 131 29 1 0.096 0.656
rs2817032 A G 77 70 14 0.304 0.734
rs7751693 G A 140 21 0 0.065 0.376

The second and third columns list the nucleotides of the major (A) and minor (a) alleles respectively. The fourth, fifth, and sixth columns show the number of subjects with major allele homozygotes (NAA), heterozygotes (NAa), and minor allele homozygotes (Naa), respectively. The seventh column shows minor allele frequency (MAF). The eighth column shows p-values suggesting that the 19 FKBP5 SNPs did not deviate from Hardy–Weinberg proportions after correction for multiple comparisons.