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Metabolic diversity in human populations and correlation with genetic and ancestral geographic distances.

Authors :
Peng, Gang
Pakstis, Andrew J.
Gandotra, Neeru
Cowan, Tina M.
Zhao, Hongyu
Kidd, Kenneth K.
Scharfe, Curt
Source :
Molecular Genetics & Metabolism. Nov2022, Vol. 137 Issue 3, p292-300. 9p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

DNA polymorphic markers and self-defined ethnicity groupings are used to group individuals with shared ancient geographic ancestry. Here we studied whether ancestral relationships between individuals could be identified from metabolic screening data reported by the California newborn screening (NBS) program. NBS data includes 41 blood metabolites measured by tandem mass spectrometry from singleton babies in 17 parent-reported ethnicity groupings. Ethnicity-associated differences identified for 71% of NBS metabolites (29 of 41, Cohen's d > 0.5) showed larger differences in blood levels of acylcarnitines than of amino acids (P < 1e-4). A metabolic distance measure, developed to compare ethnic groupings based on metabolic differences, showed low positive correlation with genetic and ancient geographic distances between the groups' ancestral world populations. Several outlier group pairs were identified with larger genetic and smaller metabolic distances (Black versus White) or with smaller genetic and larger metabolic distances (Chinese versus Japanese) indicating the influence of genetic and of environmental factors on metabolism. Using machine learning, comparison of metabolic profiles between all pairs of ethnic groupings distinguished individuals with larger genetic distance (Black versus Chinese, AUC = 0.96), while genetically more similar individuals could not be separated metabolically (Hispanic versus Native American, AUC = 0.51). Additionally, we identified metabolites informative for inferring metabolic ancestry in individuals from genetically similar populations, which included biomarkers for inborn metabolic disorders (C10:1, C12:1, C3, C5OH, Leucine-Isoleucine). This work sheds new light on metabolic differences in healthy newborns in diverse populations, which could have implications for improving genetic disease screening. • Ancestral relationships are identified using newborn metabolic screening data. • Machine learning of metabolic screening data could infer metabolic ancestry. • Knowledge of ethnic variability in metabolic screening markers informs NBS. • Ethnic diversity should be considered when establishing NBS metabolite cutoffs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10967192
Volume :
137
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Genetics & Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160172817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2022.10.002