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Título : | Subtypes of Native American ancestry and leading causes of death: Mapuche ancestryspecific associations with gallbladder cancer risk in Chile |
Autor : | Bermejo, Justo Lorenzo Boekstegers, Felix González Silos, Rosa Marcelain, Katherine Baez Benavides, Pablo Barahona Ponce, Carol Müller, Bettina Ferreccio, Catterina Koshiol, Jill Fischer, Christine Peil, Barbara Sinsheimer, Janet Fuentes Guajardo, Macarena Barajas, Olga González José, Rolando Bedoya Berrío, Gabriel de Jesús Bortolini, Maria Cátira Canizales Quinteros, Samuel Gallo, Carla Ruíz Linares, Andrés Rothhammer, Francisco |
metadata.dc.subject.*: | Neoplasias de la Vesícula Biliar Gallbladder Neoplasms Genética de Población Genetics, Population Mapuches Mapuche Indians Pueblo Indígena Indigenous Peoples http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_331524 https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D005706 https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D005828 |
Fecha de publicación : | 2017 |
Editorial : | Public Library of Science |
Citación : | Lorenzo Bermejo J, Boekstegers F, Gonza´lez Silos R, Marcelain K, Baez Benavides P, Barahona Ponce C, et al. (2017) Subtypes of Native American ancestry and leading causes of death: Mapuche ancestry-specific associations with gallbladder cancer risk in Chile. PLoS Genet 13(5): e1006756. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pgen.1006756 |
Resumen : | ABSTRACT: Latin Americans are highly heterogeneous regarding the type of Native American ancestry. Consideration of specific associations with common diseases may lead to substantial advances in unraveling of disease etiology and disease prevention. Here we investigate possible associations between the type of Native American ancestry and leading causes of death. After an aggregate-data study based on genome-wide genotype data from 1805 admixed Chileans and 639,789 deaths, we validate an identified association with gallbladder cancer relying on individual data from 64 gallbladder cancer patients, with and without a family history, and 170 healthy controls. Native American proportions were markedly underestimated when the two main types of Native American ancestry in Chile, originated from the Mapuche and Aymara indigenous peoples, were combined together. Consideration of the type of Native American ancestry was crucial to identify disease associations. Native American ancestry showed no association with gallbladder cancer mortality (P = 0.26). By contrast, each 1% increase in the Mapuche proportion represented a 3.7% increased mortality risk by gallbladder cancer (95%CI 3.1–4.3%, P = 6×10−27). Individual-data results and extensive sensitivity analyses confirmed the association between Mapuche ancestry and gallbladder cancer. Increasing Mapuche proportions were also associated with an increased mortality due to asthma and, interestingly, with a decreased mortality by diabetes. The mortality due to skin, bladder, larynx, bronchus and lung cancers increased with increasing Aymara proportions. Described methods should be considered in future studies on human population genetics and human health. Complementary individual-based studies are needed to apportion the g. |
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: | 1553-7404 |
ISSN : | 1553-7390 |
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: | 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006756 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales |
Ficheros en este ítem:
Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | |
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BedoyaGabriel_2017_MapucheAncestryspecificCancer.pdf | Artículo de investigación | 3.48 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
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