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Título : | A Genomewide Admixture Map for Latino Populations |
Autor : | Price, Alkes Patterson, Nick Yu, Fuli Cox, David Waliszewska, Alicja McDonald, Gavin Tandon, Arti Schirmer, Christine Neubauer, Julie Bedoya Berrío, Gabriel de Jesús Duque Vélez, Constanza Elena Villegas Perrasse, Alberto Bortolini, María Cátira Salzano, Francisco Mauro Gallo, Carla Mazzotti, Guido Tello Ruiz, Marcela Riba, Laura Aguilar Salinas, Carlos Alberto Canizales Quinteros, Samuel Menjívar Iraheta, Marta Alicia Klitz, William Henderson, Brian Haiman, Christopher Winkler, Cheryl Tusie Luna, Teresa Ruíz Linares, Andrés Reich, David |
metadata.dc.subject.*: | Alelos Alleles Grupo de Ascendencia Continental Africana African Continental Ancestry Group Estudios de Casos y Controles Case-Control Studies Mapeo Cromosómico Chromosome Mapping Cromosomas Humanos Chromosomes, Human Bases de Datos Genéticas Databases, Genetic Marcadores Genéticos Genetic Markers Predisposición Genética a la Enfermedad Genetic Predisposition to Disease Indios Norteamericanos Indians, North American Genética de Población Genetics, Population |
Fecha de publicación : | 2007 |
Editorial : | Cell Press |
Citación : | Price, A., Patterson, N., Yu, F., Cox, D., Waliszewska, A., McDonald, G., Tandon, A., Schirmer, C., Neubauer, J., Bedoya, G., Duque, C., Villegas, A., Bortolini, M., Salzano, F., Gallo, C., Mazzotti, G., Tello, M., Riba, L., Aguilar, C., Canizales, S., … Reich, D. (2007). A genomewide admixture map for Latino populations. American journal of human genetics, 80(6), 1024–1036. https://doi.org/10.1086/518313 |
Resumen : | ABSTRACT: Admixture mapping is an economical and powerful approach for localizing disease genes in populations of recently mixed ancestry and has proven successful in African Americans. The method holds equal promise for Latinos, who typically inherit a mix of European, Native American, and African ancestry. However, admixture mapping in Latinos has not been practical because of the lack of a map of ancestry-informative markers validated in Native American and other populations. To address this, we screened multiple databases, containing millions of markers, to identify 4,186 markers that were putatively informative for determining the ancestry of chromosomal segments in Latino populations. We experimentally validated each of these markers in at least 232 new Latino, European, Native American, and African samples, and we selected a subset of 1,649 markers to form an admixture map. An advantage of our strategy is that we focused our map on markers distinguishing Native American from other ancestries and restricted it to markers with very similar frequencies in Europeans and Africans, which decreased the number of markers needed and minimized the possibility of false disease associations. We evaluated the effectiveness of our map for localizing disease genes in four Latino populations from both North and South America. |
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: | 1537-6605 |
ISSN : | 0002-9297 |
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: | 10.1086/518313 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales |
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Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | |
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BedoyaGabriel_2007_GenomewideAdmixturePopulations.pdf | Artículo de investigación | 573.34 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
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