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Recent human evolution has shaped geographical differences in susceptibility to disease

Authors :
Universidad Pompeu Fabra
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Instituto Nacional de Bioinformática (España)
Marigorta, Urko M.
Lao, Oscar
Casals, Ferran
Calafell, Francesc
Morcillo-Suárez, Carlos
Faria, Rui
Bosch, Elena
Serra, François
Bertranpetit, Jaume
Dopazo, Hernán
Navarro, Arcadi
Universidad Pompeu Fabra
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Instituto Nacional de Bioinformática (España)
Marigorta, Urko M.
Lao, Oscar
Casals, Ferran
Calafell, Francesc
Morcillo-Suárez, Carlos
Faria, Rui
Bosch, Elena
Serra, François
Bertranpetit, Jaume
Dopazo, Hernán
Navarro, Arcadi
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

[Background] Searching for associations between genetic variants and complex diseases has been a very active area of research for over two decades. More than 51,000 potential associations have been studied and published, a figure that keeps increasing, especially with the recent explosion of array-based Genome-Wide Association Studies. Even if the number of true associations described so far is high, many of the putative risk variants detected so far have failed to be consistently replicated and are widely considered false positives. Here, we focus on the worldwide patterns of replicability of published association studies.<br />[Results] We report three main findings. First, contrary to previous results, genes associated to complex diseases present lower degrees of genetic differentiation among human populations than average genome-wide levels. Second, also contrary to previous results, the differences in replicability of disease associated-loci between Europeans and East Asians are highly correlated with genetic differentiation between these populations. Finally, highly replicated genes present increased levels of high-frequency derived alleles in European and Asian populations when compared to African populations.<br />[Conclusions] Our findings highlight the heterogeneous nature of the genetic etiology of complex disease, confirm the importance of the recent evolutionary history of our species in current patterns of disease susceptibility and could cast doubts on the status as false positives of some associations that have failed to replicate across populations.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103365541
Document Type :
Electronic Resource