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Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays

BACKGROUND: Admixture mapping is a powerful approach for identifying genetic variants involved in human disease that exploits the unique genomic structure in recently admixed populations. To use existing published panels of ancestry-informative markers (AIMs) for admixture mapping, markers have to b...

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Autores principales: Chen, Guanjie, Shriner, Daniel, Zhou, Jie, Doumatey, Ayo, Huang, Hanxia, Gerry, Norman P, Herbert, Alan, Christman, Michael F, Chen, Yuanxiu, Dunston, Georgia M, Faruque, Mezbah U, Rotimi, Charles N, Adeyemo, Adebowale
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2996945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20602785
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-417
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author Chen, Guanjie
Shriner, Daniel
Zhou, Jie
Doumatey, Ayo
Huang, Hanxia
Gerry, Norman P
Herbert, Alan
Christman, Michael F
Chen, Yuanxiu
Dunston, Georgia M
Faruque, Mezbah U
Rotimi, Charles N
Adeyemo, Adebowale
author_facet Chen, Guanjie
Shriner, Daniel
Zhou, Jie
Doumatey, Ayo
Huang, Hanxia
Gerry, Norman P
Herbert, Alan
Christman, Michael F
Chen, Yuanxiu
Dunston, Georgia M
Faruque, Mezbah U
Rotimi, Charles N
Adeyemo, Adebowale
author_sort Chen, Guanjie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Admixture mapping is a powerful approach for identifying genetic variants involved in human disease that exploits the unique genomic structure in recently admixed populations. To use existing published panels of ancestry-informative markers (AIMs) for admixture mapping, markers have to be genotyped de novo for each admixed study sample and samples representing the ancestral parental populations. The increased availability of dense marker data on commercial chips has made it feasible to develop panels wherein the markers need not be predetermined. RESULTS: We developed two panels of AIMs (~2,000 markers each) based on the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0 for admixture mapping with African American samples. These two AIM panels had good map power that was higher than that of a denser panel of ~20,000 random markers as well as other published panels of AIMs. As a test case, we applied the panels in an admixture mapping study of hypertension in African Americans in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. CONCLUSIONS: Developing marker panels for admixture mapping from existing genome-wide genotype data offers two major advantages: (1) no de novo genotyping needs to be done, thereby saving costs, and (2) markers can be filtered for various quality measures and replacement markers (to minimize gaps) can be selected at no additional cost. Panels of carefully selected AIMs have two major advantages over panels of random markers: (1) the map power from sparser panels of AIMs is higher than that of ~10-fold denser panels of random markers, and (2) clusters can be labeled based on information from the parental populations. With current technology, chip-based genome-wide genotyping is less expensive than genotyping ~20,000 random markers. The major advantage of using random markers is the absence of ascertainment effects resulting from the process of selecting markers. The ability to develop marker panels informative for ancestry from SNP chip genotype data provides a fresh opportunity to conduct admixture mapping for disease genes in admixed populations when genome-wide association data exist or are planned.
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spelling pubmed-29969452010-12-07 Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays Chen, Guanjie Shriner, Daniel Zhou, Jie Doumatey, Ayo Huang, Hanxia Gerry, Norman P Herbert, Alan Christman, Michael F Chen, Yuanxiu Dunston, Georgia M Faruque, Mezbah U Rotimi, Charles N Adeyemo, Adebowale BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Admixture mapping is a powerful approach for identifying genetic variants involved in human disease that exploits the unique genomic structure in recently admixed populations. To use existing published panels of ancestry-informative markers (AIMs) for admixture mapping, markers have to be genotyped de novo for each admixed study sample and samples representing the ancestral parental populations. The increased availability of dense marker data on commercial chips has made it feasible to develop panels wherein the markers need not be predetermined. RESULTS: We developed two panels of AIMs (~2,000 markers each) based on the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0 for admixture mapping with African American samples. These two AIM panels had good map power that was higher than that of a denser panel of ~20,000 random markers as well as other published panels of AIMs. As a test case, we applied the panels in an admixture mapping study of hypertension in African Americans in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. CONCLUSIONS: Developing marker panels for admixture mapping from existing genome-wide genotype data offers two major advantages: (1) no de novo genotyping needs to be done, thereby saving costs, and (2) markers can be filtered for various quality measures and replacement markers (to minimize gaps) can be selected at no additional cost. Panels of carefully selected AIMs have two major advantages over panels of random markers: (1) the map power from sparser panels of AIMs is higher than that of ~10-fold denser panels of random markers, and (2) clusters can be labeled based on information from the parental populations. With current technology, chip-based genome-wide genotyping is less expensive than genotyping ~20,000 random markers. The major advantage of using random markers is the absence of ascertainment effects resulting from the process of selecting markers. The ability to develop marker panels informative for ancestry from SNP chip genotype data provides a fresh opportunity to conduct admixture mapping for disease genes in admixed populations when genome-wide association data exist or are planned. BioMed Central 2010-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2996945/ /pubmed/20602785 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-417 Text en Copyright ©2010 Chen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chen, Guanjie
Shriner, Daniel
Zhou, Jie
Doumatey, Ayo
Huang, Hanxia
Gerry, Norman P
Herbert, Alan
Christman, Michael F
Chen, Yuanxiu
Dunston, Georgia M
Faruque, Mezbah U
Rotimi, Charles N
Adeyemo, Adebowale
Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title_full Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title_fullStr Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title_full_unstemmed Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title_short Development of admixture mapping panels for African Americans from commercial high-density SNP arrays
title_sort development of admixture mapping panels for african americans from commercial high-density snp arrays
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2996945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20602785
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-417
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