Analysis of the genetic ancestry of patients with oral clefts from South American admixed populations
Autor: | Fernando A. Poletta, Sidney Emanuel Batista dos Santos, Camilla Dutra Vieira-Machado, Alexandre R. Vieira, Luiz Carlos Santana da Silva, Juan C. Mereb, Iêda M. Orioli, Eduardo E. Castilla, Cláudia Maria da Rocha Martins, Flávia Martinez de Carvalho |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Genetics medicine.medical_specialty Genotype Cleft Lip Genetic genealogy Ethnic group 030206 dentistry 030105 genetics & heredity Biology White People Cleft Palate 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine South american Statistical significance Epidemiology medicine Humans In patient Indel General Dentistry Genotyping Brazil |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Oral Sciences. 124:406-411 |
ISSN: | 0909-8836 |
Popis: | Increased susceptibility to cleft lip, with or without cleft palate (CL±P) has been observed in South America, as related to Amerindian ancestry, using epidemiological data, uniparental markers, and blood groups. In this study, it was evaluated whether this increased risk remains when Amerindian ancestry is estimated using autosomal markers and considered in the predictive model. Ancestry was estimated through genotyping 62 insertion and deletion (INDEL) markers in sample sets of patients with CL±P, patients with cleft palate (CP), and controls, from Patagonia in southern Argentina and Belém in northern Brazil. The Amerindian ancestry in patients from Patagonia with CL±P was greater than in controls although it did not reach statistical significance. The European ancestry in patients with CL±P from Belém and in patients with CP from Belém and Patagonia was higher than in controls and statistically significant for patients with CP who were from Belém. This high contribution of European genetic ancestry among patients with CP who were from Belém has not been previously observed in American populations. Our results do not corroborate the currently accepted risks for CL±P and CP estimated by epidemiological studies in the North American populations and probably reflect the higher admixture found in South American ethnic groups when compared with the same ethnic groups from the North American populations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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