No association between genetic ancestry and susceptibility to asthma or atopy in Canary Islanders

被引:0
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作者
María Pino-Yanes
Almudena Corrales
José Cumplido
Ruperto González
María José Torres-Galván
Orlando Acosta Fernández
Inmaculada Sánchez-Machín
Javier Figueroa
Anselmo Sánchez-Palacios
Jesús Villar
Mariano Hernández
Teresa Carrillo
Carlos Flores
机构
[1] Instituto de Salud Carlos III,CIBER de Enfermedades Respiratorias
[2] Hospital Universitario N.S. de Candelaria,Research Unit
[3] Hospital Universitario Dr. Negrin,Allergy Unit
[4] Complejo Hospitalario Universitario NS Candelaria,Allergy Unit, Hospital del Tórax
[5] Hospital Universitario Dr. Negrin,Research Unit
[6] Hospital Universitario de Canarias,Neumology Unit
[7] Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria,Allergy Unit
[8] Hospital Universitario Dr. Negrin,Multidisciplinary Organ Dysfunction Evaluation Research Network (MODERN), Research Unit
[9] St. Michael’s Hospital,Keenan Research Center
[10] Universidad de La Laguna,Genetics Laboratory, Instituto Universitario de Enfermedades Tropicales y Salud Pública de Canarias
来源
Immunogenetics | 2012年 / 64卷
关键词
Allergy; Genetic susceptibility; North Africa; Admixture;
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学科分类号
摘要
Asthma is a complex respiratory disease characterized by chronic inflammation of airways and frequently associated with atopic symptoms. The population from the Canary Islands, which has resulted from a recent admixture of North African and Iberian populations, shows the highest prevalence of asthma and atopic symptoms among the Spanish populations. Although environmental particularities would account for the majority of such disparity, genetic ancestry might play a role in increasing the susceptibility of asthma or atopy, as have been demonstrated in other recently African-admixed populations. Here, we aimed to explore whether genetic ancestry was associated with asthma or related traits in the Canary Islanders. For that, a total of 734 DNA samples from unrelated individuals of the GOA study, self-reporting at least two generations of ancestors from the Canary Islands (391 asthmatics and 343 controls), were successfully genotyped for 83 ancestry informative markers (AIMs), which allowed to precisely distinguishing between North African and Iberian ancestries. No association was found between genetic ancestry and asthma or related traits after adjusting by demographic variables differing among compared groups. Similarly, none of the individual AIMs was associated with asthma when results were considered in the context of the multiple comparisons performed (0.005 ≤ p value ≤ 0.042; 0.221 ≤ q value ≤ 0.443). Our results suggest that if genetic ancestry were involved in the susceptibility to asthma or related traits among Canary Islanders, its effects would be modest. Larger studies, examining more genetic variants, would be needed to explore such possibility.
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页码:705 / 711
页数:6
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