Genetic disease risks of under-represented founder populations in New York City.

IF 4 2区 生物学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
PLoS Genetics Pub Date : 2025-06-24 eCollection Date: 2025-06-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgen.1011755
Mariko Isshiki, Anthony J Griffen, Paul Meissner, Paulette Spencer, Michael D Cabana, Susan D Klugman, Mirtha Colón, Zoya Maksumova, Shakira Suglia, Carmen R Isasi, John M Greally, Srilakshmi M Raj
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The detection of founder pathogenic variants, those observed in high frequency only in a group of individuals with increased inter-relatedness, can help improve delivery of health care for that community. We identified 16 groups with shared ancestry, based on genomic segments that are shared through identity by descent (IBD), in New York City using the genomic data of 25,366 residents from the All Of Us Research Program and the Mount Sinai BioMe biobank. From these groups we defined 7 as founder populations, mostly communities currently under-represented in medical genomics research, such as Puerto Rican and Garifuna. The enrichment analysis of ClinVar pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants in each group identified 201 of these damaging variants across the seven founder populations. We confirmed disease-causing variants previously reported to occur at increased frequencies in Ashkenazi Jewish and Puerto Rican genetic ancestry groups, but most of the damaging variants identified have not been previously associated with any such founder populations, and most of these founder populations have not been described to have increased prevalence of the associated rare disease. Twenty-two of 47 variants meeting Tier 2 prenatal screening criteria (1/100 carrier frequency within these founder groups) have never previously been reported. We show how population structure studies can provide insights into rare diseases disproportionately affecting under-represented founder populations, delivering a health care benefit but also a potential source of stigmatization of these communities, who should be part of the decision-making about implementation into health care delivery.

纽约市未被充分代表的创始人群体的遗传疾病风险
创始者致病性变异的检测,即仅在一组相互关联性增强的个体中观察到的高频率变异,可以帮助改善该社区的卫生保健服务。我们利用来自我们所有人研究计划和西奈山生物银行的25,366名居民的基因组数据,基于通过血统识别(IBD)共享的基因组片段,在纽约市确定了16个具有共同祖先的群体。从这些群体中,我们将其定义为创始人群,其中大多数是目前在医学基因组学研究中代表性不足的社区,如波多黎各和加利富纳。ClinVar致病性或可能致病性(P/LP)变异的富集分析在7个创始群体中鉴定了201个这些破坏性变异。我们证实了先前报道的致病变异在德系犹太人和波多黎各遗传祖先群体中频率增加,但大多数已确定的破坏性变异以前并未与任何此类创始人群相关,并且大多数这些创始人群并未被描述为相关罕见疾病的患病率增加。47个变异中有22个符合2级产前筛查标准(这些创始者群体中1/100携带者频率),以前从未报道过。我们展示了人口结构研究如何能够提供对罕见疾病不成比例地影响代表性不足的创始人人群的见解,提供医疗保健福利,但也是这些社区污名化的潜在来源,他们应该成为实施医疗保健服务决策的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
PLoS Genetics
PLoS Genetics GENETICS & HEREDITY-
自引率
2.20%
发文量
438
期刊介绍: PLOS Genetics is run by an international Editorial Board, headed by the Editors-in-Chief, Greg Barsh (HudsonAlpha Institute of Biotechnology, and Stanford University School of Medicine) and Greg Copenhaver (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill). Articles published in PLOS Genetics are archived in PubMed Central and cited in PubMed.
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