Press Release: In European Ancestry Populations Study Unveils Complex Admixture

Posted on November 10, 2023 by Admin

A recent study published provides evidence of subcontinental admixture in people with European ancestry, in contrast to previous genetic association studies that recognize European ancestry populations as stratified and not as admixed.

Introduction

Evidence collected from human genetic studies indicates a clear genetic variation between North and South Europe. Ancient DNA analyses also indicate genetic admixture within Europe. Despite this evidence, European ancestry populations are mostly regarded as stratified and not as admixed at the subcontinental level.

Most genetic epidemiological studies of Europeans and European Americans consider population stratification as the significant confounding factor and control for its potential confounding effects using genome-wide ancestry estimated by principal components analysis. Importantly, these studies do not control for locus-specific ancestry, which is inherent to admixed populations and could lead to misestimation of polygenic adaptation and poor predictive performance of polygenic risk scores.

Study

Scientists at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH), integrated individual-level genome-wide data from about 19,000 European-ancestry people across 79 European and five European American populations.

Using the genetic data, a new reference panel was created to determine ancestral diversity that was missed by both the 1,000 Genomes and Human Genome Diversity Projects.

Results

Europeans and European Americans were found to have mixed genetic lineages, commonly known as admixture. This contrasts previous large-scale human genetic studies that consider European-ancestry people as genetically homogenous populations.

For experimental confirmation, the scientists analyzed the lactase gene LCT, which is highly varied across Europe and encodes for the enzyme lactase that helps digest the milk sugar lactose. The new reference panel determined associations between a highly differentiated variant of the lactase gene and traits such as height, body mass index (BMI), and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels.

The analysis conducted after adjusting for both genome-wide ancestry (stratified population) and locus-specific ancestry (admixed population) revealed that the genomic variant of the lactase gene is not associated with height and LDL-C levels. However, there was an association between the variant and BMI.

In addition to the observed incorrect association between the lactase gene and specific traits, there could be more false associations in the literature. Thus, understanding the link between genomic variants and different traits is particularly important for estimating polygenic risk scores and predicting an individual’s ability to effectively and safely respond to drug treatments. A correct understanding of genetic ancestry is vital for predicting genetic risks for common diseases.

The new reference panel created by the scientists is available to the scientific community for future use.

Conclusion

The current NIH study finds that both Europeans and European Americans are admixed at the subcontinental level, with admixture dates differing among subgroups of European Americans. These findings highlight the need to re-evaluate the results obtained from previous human genetic studies that did not consider admixture in their analysis of European ancestry populations.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20231108/Genetic-melting-pot-Study-unveils-complex-admixture-in-European-ancestry-populations.aspx