Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.

In populations that have a high degree of admixture, such as in Brazil, the sole use of ethnicity self-declaration information is not a good method for classifying individuals regarding their ethnicity. Here, we evaluate the relationship of self-declared ethnicities with genomic ancestry and mitocho...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mari M S G Cardena, Andrea Ribeiro-Dos-Santos, Sidney Santos, Alfredo J Mansur, Alexandre C Pereira, Cintia Fridman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3634831?pdf=render
id doaj-5975be11adf5438b8d7f7e7f2d1d61d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5975be11adf5438b8d7f7e7f2d1d61d72020-11-24T21:18:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0184e6200510.1371/journal.pone.0062005Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.Mari M S G CardenaAndrea Ribeiro-Dos-SantosSidney SantosAlfredo J MansurAlexandre C PereiraCintia FridmanIn populations that have a high degree of admixture, such as in Brazil, the sole use of ethnicity self-declaration information is not a good method for classifying individuals regarding their ethnicity. Here, we evaluate the relationship of self-declared ethnicities with genomic ancestry and mitochondrial haplogroups in 492 individuals from southeastern Brazil. Mitochondrial haplogroups were obtained by analyzing the hypervariable regions of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and the genomic ancestry was obtained using 48 autosomal insertion-deletion ancestry informative markers (AIM). Of the 492 individuals, 74.6% self-declared as White, 13.8% as Brown and 10.4% as Black. Classification of the mtDNA haplogroups showed that 46.3% had African mtDNA, and the genomic ancestry analysis showed that the main contribution was European (57.4%). When we looked at the distribution of mtDNA and genomic ancestry according to the self-declared ethnicities from 367 individuals who self-declared as White, 37.6% showed African mtDNA, and they had a high contribution of European genomic ancestry (63.3%) but also a significant contribution of African ancestry (22.2%). Of the 68 individuals who self-declared as Brown, 25% showed Amerindian mtDNA and similar contribution of European and African genomic ancestries. Of the 51 subjects who self-declared as black, 80.4% had African mtDNA, and the main contribution of genomic ancestry was African (55.6%), but they also had a significant proportion of European ancestry (32.1%). The Brazilian population had a uniform degree of Amerindian genomic ancestry, and it was only with the use of genetic markers (autosomal or mitochondrial) that we were able to capture Amerindian ancestry information. Additionally, it was possible to observe a high degree of heterogeneity in the ancestry for both types of genetic markers, which shows the high genetic admixture that is present in the Brazilian population. We suggest that in epidemiological studies, the use of these methods could provide complementary information.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3634831?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mari M S G Cardena
Andrea Ribeiro-Dos-Santos
Sidney Santos
Alfredo J Mansur
Alexandre C Pereira
Cintia Fridman
spellingShingle Mari M S G Cardena
Andrea Ribeiro-Dos-Santos
Sidney Santos
Alfredo J Mansur
Alexandre C Pereira
Cintia Fridman
Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mari M S G Cardena
Andrea Ribeiro-Dos-Santos
Sidney Santos
Alfredo J Mansur
Alexandre C Pereira
Cintia Fridman
author_sort Mari M S G Cardena
title Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
title_short Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
title_full Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
title_fullStr Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in Brazilian individuals.
title_sort assessment of the relationship between self-declared ethnicity, mitochondrial haplogroups and genomic ancestry in brazilian individuals.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description In populations that have a high degree of admixture, such as in Brazil, the sole use of ethnicity self-declaration information is not a good method for classifying individuals regarding their ethnicity. Here, we evaluate the relationship of self-declared ethnicities with genomic ancestry and mitochondrial haplogroups in 492 individuals from southeastern Brazil. Mitochondrial haplogroups were obtained by analyzing the hypervariable regions of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and the genomic ancestry was obtained using 48 autosomal insertion-deletion ancestry informative markers (AIM). Of the 492 individuals, 74.6% self-declared as White, 13.8% as Brown and 10.4% as Black. Classification of the mtDNA haplogroups showed that 46.3% had African mtDNA, and the genomic ancestry analysis showed that the main contribution was European (57.4%). When we looked at the distribution of mtDNA and genomic ancestry according to the self-declared ethnicities from 367 individuals who self-declared as White, 37.6% showed African mtDNA, and they had a high contribution of European genomic ancestry (63.3%) but also a significant contribution of African ancestry (22.2%). Of the 68 individuals who self-declared as Brown, 25% showed Amerindian mtDNA and similar contribution of European and African genomic ancestries. Of the 51 subjects who self-declared as black, 80.4% had African mtDNA, and the main contribution of genomic ancestry was African (55.6%), but they also had a significant proportion of European ancestry (32.1%). The Brazilian population had a uniform degree of Amerindian genomic ancestry, and it was only with the use of genetic markers (autosomal or mitochondrial) that we were able to capture Amerindian ancestry information. Additionally, it was possible to observe a high degree of heterogeneity in the ancestry for both types of genetic markers, which shows the high genetic admixture that is present in the Brazilian population. We suggest that in epidemiological studies, the use of these methods could provide complementary information.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3634831?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT marimsgcardena assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
AT andrearibeirodossantos assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
AT sidneysantos assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
AT alfredojmansur assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
AT alexandrecpereira assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
AT cintiafridman assessmentoftherelationshipbetweenselfdeclaredethnicitymitochondrialhaplogroupsandgenomicancestryinbrazilianindividuals
_version_ 1726010605040566272