Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait

Much has been learnt about the genetics of Homo sapiens over the last 130 years including gene structure and number, genome size, and levels of genetic diversity. Many things remain less well understood, however, not least the genetic basis of common, complex traits and disorders. Consideration of f...

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Main Author: White, Daniel James
Published: University College London (University of London) 2006
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.423044
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4230442017-10-04T03:13:30ZEvolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric traitWhite, Daniel James2006Much has been learnt about the genetics of Homo sapiens over the last 130 years including gene structure and number, genome size, and levels of genetic diversity. Many things remain less well understood, however, not least the genetic basis of common, complex traits and disorders. Consideration of functionally important but non-coding regions may improve understanding. I assessed naturally occurring, genetic variation in the promoters of four serotinergic genes and revealed (75%) to be polymorphic, two-thirds of which (50% overall) had functional variant haplotypes. These promoter-based polymorphisms are good functional candidate loci for psychiatric trait mapping studies. The variation within our genomes is organised by historic evolutionary and demographic events. Populations with unique demographic histories may be important in complex trait gene mapping, and the Antioquia isolate (North-West Colombia) is an example of such a population. Using population genetic analyses I have shown high autosomal diversity in Antioquia structure analysis showed relatedness to be strong with Spain and modest with African and Native American populations, likely reflective of its historic admixture. LD was not pronounced in Antioquia, potentially an artefact of marker selection. However, Antioquia may have an important role in admixture mapping. Mapping multifactorial psychiatric traits and disorders is particularly challenging for geneticists. To investigate the genetics of BPI, I performed a family-based association analysis of the SLC6A4 gene in the Antioquia and CVCR populations using 10 SNPs, 3 STRs and 1 VNTR spanning approximately 300kb, including an assessment of LD structure. Moderate over-transmission in BPI cases was observed for a haplotype consisting of the functional VNTR (the LPR) long allele and an adjacent STR (Antioquia TDT %2= 6.00, p=0.014 CVCR HHRR x2=5.012, p=0.025 both TDT %2= 8.00, p=0.005). Characterising genetic variation at the population level is important to improve population-based genetic association studies of complex traits, and the inclusion of regulatory variation is supported.599.94University College London (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.423044http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1445981/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 599.94
spellingShingle 599.94
White, Daniel James
Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
description Much has been learnt about the genetics of Homo sapiens over the last 130 years including gene structure and number, genome size, and levels of genetic diversity. Many things remain less well understood, however, not least the genetic basis of common, complex traits and disorders. Consideration of functionally important but non-coding regions may improve understanding. I assessed naturally occurring, genetic variation in the promoters of four serotinergic genes and revealed (75%) to be polymorphic, two-thirds of which (50% overall) had functional variant haplotypes. These promoter-based polymorphisms are good functional candidate loci for psychiatric trait mapping studies. The variation within our genomes is organised by historic evolutionary and demographic events. Populations with unique demographic histories may be important in complex trait gene mapping, and the Antioquia isolate (North-West Colombia) is an example of such a population. Using population genetic analyses I have shown high autosomal diversity in Antioquia structure analysis showed relatedness to be strong with Spain and modest with African and Native American populations, likely reflective of its historic admixture. LD was not pronounced in Antioquia, potentially an artefact of marker selection. However, Antioquia may have an important role in admixture mapping. Mapping multifactorial psychiatric traits and disorders is particularly challenging for geneticists. To investigate the genetics of BPI, I performed a family-based association analysis of the SLC6A4 gene in the Antioquia and CVCR populations using 10 SNPs, 3 STRs and 1 VNTR spanning approximately 300kb, including an assessment of LD structure. Moderate over-transmission in BPI cases was observed for a haplotype consisting of the functional VNTR (the LPR) long allele and an adjacent STR (Antioquia TDT %2= 6.00, p=0.014 CVCR HHRR x2=5.012, p=0.025 both TDT %2= 8.00, p=0.005). Characterising genetic variation at the population level is important to improve population-based genetic association studies of complex traits, and the inclusion of regulatory variation is supported.
author White, Daniel James
author_facet White, Daniel James
author_sort White, Daniel James
title Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
title_short Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
title_full Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
title_fullStr Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary history of a South American population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
title_sort evolutionary history of a south american population isolate and the genetic basis of a complex neuropsychiatric trait
publisher University College London (University of London)
publishDate 2006
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.423044
work_keys_str_mv AT whitedanieljames evolutionaryhistoryofasouthamericanpopulationisolateandthegeneticbasisofacomplexneuropsychiatrictrait
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