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Ancestry of the Timorese: Age-related macular degeneration associated genotype and allele sharing among human populations from throughout the world

  • Margaux A. Morrison
  • , Tiago R. Magalhaes
  • , Jacqueline Ramke
  • , Silvia E. Smith
  • , Sean Ennis
  • , Claire L. Simpson
  • , Laura Portas
  • , Federico Murgia
  • , Jeeyun Ahn
  • , Caitlin Dardenne
  • , Katie Mayne
  • , Rosann Robinson
  • , Denise J. Morgan
  • , Garry Brian
  • , Lucy Lee
  • , Se J. Woo
  • , Fani Zacharaki
  • , Evangelia E. Tsironi
  • , Joan W. Miller
  • , Ivana K. Kim
  • Kyu H. Park, Joan E. Bailey-Wilson, Lindsay A. Farrer, Dwight Stambolian, Margaret M. DeAngelis
  • University of Utah
  • Children’s Health Ireland
  • University College Dublin
  • Fred Hollows Foundation
  • National Institutes of Health
  • National Research Council of Italy
  • Seoul National University
  • London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
  • University of Thessaly
  • Harvard University
  • Boston University
  • University of Pennsylvania

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

We observed that the third leading cause of blindness in the world, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), occurs at a very low documented frequency in a population-based cohort from Timor-Leste. Thus, we determined a complete catalog of the ancestry of the Timorese by analysis of whole exome chip data and haplogroup analysis of SNP genotypes determined by sequencing the Hypervariable I and II regions of the mitochondrial genome and 17 genotyped YSTR markers obtained from 535 individuals. We genotyped 20 previously reported AMD-associated SNPs in the Timorese to examine their allele frequencies compared to and between previously documented AMD cohorts of varying ethnicities. For those without AMD (average age > 55 years), genotype and allele frequencies were similar for most SNPs with a few exceptions. The major risk allele of HTRA1 rs11200638 (10q26) was at a significantly higher frequency in the Timorese, as well as 3 of the 5 protective CFH (1q32) SNPs (rs800292, rs2284664, and rs12066959). Additionally, the most commonly associated AMD-risk SNP, CFH rs1061170 (Y402H), was also seen at a much lower frequency in the Korean and Timorese populations than in the assessed Caucasian populations (C ~7 vs. ~40%, respectively). The difference in allele frequencies between the Timorese population and the other genotyped populations, along with the haplogroup analysis, also highlight the genetic diversity of the Timorese. Specifically, the most common ancestry groupings were Oceanic (Melanesian and Papuan) and Eastern Asian (specifically Han Chinese). The low prevalence of AMD in the Timorese population (2 of 535 randomly selected participants) may be due to the enrichment of protective alleles in this population at the 1q32 locus.

Original languageEnglish
Article number238
JournalFrontiers in Genetics
Volume6
Issue numberJUL
DOIs
StatePublished - 2015

Keywords

  • Age-related macular degeneration
  • Ancestry
  • Complex disease and epidemiology
  • Population genetics

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