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South Asian medical cohorts reveal strong founder effects and high rates of homozygosity

Authors :
Jeffrey D. Wall
J. Fah Sathirapongsasuti
Ravi Gupta
Asif Rasheed
Radha Venkatesan
Saurabh Belsare
Ramesh Menon
Sameer Phalke
Anuradha Mittal
John Fang
Deepak Tanneeru
Manjari Deshmukh
Akshi Bassi
Jacqueline Robinson
Ruchi Chaudhary
Sakthivel Murugan
Zameer ul-Asar
Imran Saleem
Unzila Ishtiaq
Areej Fatima
Saqib Shafi Sheikh
Shahid Hameed
Mohammad Ishaq
Syed Zahed Rasheed
Fazal-ur-Rehman Memon
Anjum Jalal
Shahid Abbas
Philippe Frossard
Christian Fuchsberger
Lukas Forer
Sebastian Schoenherr
Qixin Bei
Tushar Bhangale
Jennifer Tom
Santosh Gopi Krishna Gadde
Priya B V
Naveen Kumar Naik
Minxian Wang
Pui-Yan Kwok
Amit V. Khera
B. R. Lakshmi
Adam S. Butterworth
Rajiv Chowdhury
John Danesh
Emanuele di Angelantonio
Aliya Naheed
Vinay Goyal
Rukmini M. Kandadai
Hrishikesh Kumar
Rupam Borgohain
Adreesh Mukherjee
Pettarusp M. Wadia
Ravi Yadav
Soaham Desai
Niraj Kumar
Atanu Biswas
Pramod Kumar Pal
Uday B. Muthane
Shymal K. Das
Vedam L. Ramprasad
Prashanth L. Kukkle
Somasekar Seshagiri
Sekar Kathiresan
Arkasubhra Ghosh
V. Mohan
Danish Saleheen
Eric W. Stawiski
Andrew S. Peterson
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract The benefits of large-scale genetic studies for healthcare of the populations studied are well documented, but these genetic studies have traditionally ignored people from some parts of the world, such as South Asia. Here we describe whole genome sequence (WGS) data from 4806 individuals recruited from the healthcare delivery systems of Pakistan, India and Bangladesh, combined with WGS from 927 individuals from isolated South Asian populations. We characterize population structure in South Asia and describe a genotyping array (SARGAM) and imputation reference panel that are optimized for South Asian genomes. We find evidence for high rates of reproductive isolation, endogamy and consanguinity that vary across the subcontinent and that lead to levels of rare homozygotes that reach 100 times that seen in outbred populations. Founder effects increase the power to associate functional variants with disease processes and make South Asia a uniquely powerful place for population-scale genetic studies.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5c553736d824d84a9c6fd8682dcf4dd
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38766-1