Items on Race #8

Characterizing the admixed African ancestry of African Americans
Abstract
Background
Accurate, high-throughput genotyping allows the fine characterization of genetic ancestry. Here we applied recently developed statistical and computational techniques to the question of African ancestry in African Americans by using data on more than 450,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped in 94 Africans of diverse geographic origins included in the HGDP, as well as 136 African Americans and 38 European Americans participating in the Atherosclerotic Disease Vascular Function and Genetic Epidemiology (ADVANCE) study. To focus on African ancestry, we reduced the data to include only those genotypes in each African American determined statistically to be African in origin.

Results
From cluster analysis, we found that all the African Americans are admixed in their African components of ancestry, with the majority contributions being from West and West-Central Africa, and only modest variation in these African-ancestry proportions among individuals. Furthermore, by principal components analysis, we found little evidence of genetic structure within the African component of ancestry in African Americans.

Conclusions
These results are consistent with historic mating patterns among African Americans that are largely uncorrelated to African ancestral origins, and they cast doubt on the general utility of mtDNA or Y-chromosome markers alone to delineate the full African ancestry of African Americans. Our results also indicate that the genetic architecture of African Americans is distinct from that of Africans, and that the greatest source of potential genetic stratification bias in case-control studies of African Americans derives from the proportion of European ancestry.
https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/gb-2009-10-12-r141

A variant of the gene encoding leukotriene A4 hydrolase confers ethnicity-specific risk of myocardial infarction.

Abstract
Variants of the gene ALOX5AP (also known as FLAP) encoding arachidonate 5-lipoxygenase activating protein are known to be associated with risk of myocardial infarction. Here we show that a haplotype (HapK) spanning the LTA4H gene encoding leukotriene A4 hydrolase, a protein in the same biochemical pathway as ALOX5AP, confers modest risk of myocardial infarction in an Icelandic cohort. Measurements of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) production suggest that this risk is mediated through upregulation of the leukotriene pathway. Three cohorts from the United States also show that HapK confers a modest relative risk (1.16) in European Americans, but it confers a threefold larger risk in African Americans. About 27% of the European American controls carried at least one copy of HapK, as compared with only 6% of African American controls. Our analyses indicate that HapK is very rare in Africa and that its occurrence in African Americans is due to European admixture. Interactions with other genetic or environmental risk factors that are more common in African Americans are likely to account for the greater relative risk conferred by HapK in this group.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16282974

Genetic Variants of Arachidonate 5-Lipoxygenase–Activating Protein, and Risk of Incident Myocardial Infarction and Ischemic Stroke
Abstract
Background and Purpose— Recent findings have implicated specific gene polymorphisms of arachidonate 5-lipoxygenase–activating protein (ALOX5AP), and 2 at-risk haplotypes (HapA, HapB) in myocardial infarction and stroke. To date, no prospective data are available.

Methods— We evaluated 10 specific Icelandic ALOX5AP gene variants among 600 male participants with incident atherothrombotic events (myocardial infarction [MI] or ischemic stroke) and among 600 age- and smoking-matched male participants, all white, who remained free of reported cardiovascular disease during follow-up within the Physicians’ Health Study cohort.

Results— Overall allele, genotype, and haplotype distributions were similar between cases and controls. Single-marker conditional logistic regression analysis adjusted for potential risk factors found no association with risk of atherothrombotic events. Further investigation using a haplotype-based approach showed similar null findings with MI (HapA: odds ratio [OR]=1.18, 95% CI, 0.76 to 1.85; P=0.46; HapB: odds ratio=0.62, 95% CI, 0.36 to 1.07; P=0.08), and with ischemic stroke (HapA: odds ratio=1.11, 95% CI, 0.65 to 1.89; P=0.71; HapB: odds ratio=0.82, 95% CI, 0.47 to 1.42; P=0.47).

Conclusions— We found no evidence for an association of the specific Icelandic ALOX5P gene variants/at-risk haplotypes tested with risk of incident MI nor ischemic stroke in this prospective, non-Icelandic study.
https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/01.STR.0000229905.25080.01

Obergruppenfuhrer SS

The Dot

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