Population admixture associated with disease prevalence in the Boston Puerto Rican health study
- 24 December 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Human Genetics
- Vol. 125 (2), 199-209
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-008-0612-7
Abstract
Older Puerto Ricans living in the continental U.S. suffer from higher rates of diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease and depression compared to non-Hispanic White populations. Complex diseases, such as these, are likely due to multiple, potentially interacting, genetic, environmental and social risk factors. Presumably, many of these environmental and genetic risk factors are contextual. We reasoned that racial background may modify some of these risk factors and be associated with health disparities among Puerto Ricans. The contemporary Puerto Rican population is genetically heterogeneous and originated from three ancestral populations: European settlers, native Taíno Indians, and West Africans. This rich-mixed ancestry of Puerto Ricans provides the intrinsic variability needed to untangle complex gene–environment interactions in disease susceptibility and severity. Herein, we determined whether a specific ancestral background was associated with either of four major disease outcomes (diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, and depression). We estimated the genetic ancestry of 1,129 subjects from the Boston Puerto Rican Health Study based on genotypes of 100 ancestry informative markers (AIMs). We examined the effects of ancestry on tests of association between single AIMs and disease traits. The ancestral composition of this population was 57.2% European, 27.4% African, and 15.4% Native American. African ancestry was negatively associated with type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and positively correlated with hypertension. It is likely that the high prevalence rate of diabetes in Africans, Hispanics, and Native Americans is not due to genetic variation alone, but to the combined effects of genetic variation interacting with environmental and social factors.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genome-wide screen for asthma in Puerto Ricans: evidence for association with 5q23 regionHuman Genetics, 2008
- PPARGC1A Variation Associated With DNA Damage, Diabetes, and Cardiovascular DiseasesDiabetes, 2008
- PCA-Correlated SNPs for Structure Identification in Worldwide Human PopulationsPLoS Genetics, 2007
- The Obesity Epidemic in the United States Gender, Age, Socioeconomic, Racial/Ethnic, and Geographic Characteristics: A Systematic Review and Meta-Regression AnalysisEpidemiologic Reviews, 2007
- Principal components analysis corrects for stratification in genome-wide association studiesNature Genetics, 2006
- Reconstructing Genetic Ancestry Blocks in Admixed IndividualsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2006
- Population Structure and EigenanalysisPLoS Genetics, 2006
- Population stratification confounds genetic association studies among LatinosHuman Genetics, 2005
- Ancestral proportions and their association with skin pigmentation and bone mineral density in Puerto Rican women from New York cityHuman Genetics, 2004
- The CES-D ScaleApplied Psychological Measurement, 1977