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Development of a panel of genome-wide ancestry informative markers to study admixture throughout the Americas
Authors:Galanter Joshua Mark  Fernandez-Lopez Juan Carlos  Gignoux Christopher R  Barnholtz-Sloan Jill  Fernandez-Rozadilla Ceres  Via Marc  Hidalgo-Miranda Alfredo  Contreras Alejandra V  Figueroa Laura Uribe  Raska Paola  Jimenez-Sanchez Gerardo  Zolezzi Irma Silva  Torres Maria  Ponte Clara Ruiz  Ruiz Yarimar  Salas Antonio  Nguyen Elizabeth  Eng Celeste  Borjas Lisbeth  Zabala William  Barreto Guillermo  González Fernando Rondón  Ibarra Adriana  Taboada Patricia  Porras Liliana  Moreno Fabián  Bigham Abigail  Gutierrez Gerardo  Brutsaert Tom  León-Velarde Fabiola  Moore Lorna G  Vargas Enrique  Cruz Miguel  Escobedo Jorge
Affiliation:University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America. joshua.galanter@ucsf.edu
Abstract:Most individuals throughout the Americas are admixed descendants of Native American, European, and African ancestors. Complex historical factors have resulted in varying proportions of ancestral contributions between individuals within and among ethnic groups. We developed a panel of 446 ancestry informative markers (AIMs) optimized to estimate ancestral proportions in individuals and populations throughout Latin America. We used genome-wide data from 953 individuals from diverse African, European, and Native American populations to select AIMs optimized for each of the three main continental populations that form the basis of modern Latin American populations. We selected markers on the basis of locus-specific branch length to be informative, well distributed throughout the genome, capable of being genotyped on widely available commercial platforms, and applicable throughout the Americas by minimizing within-continent heterogeneity. We then validated the panel in samples from four admixed populations by comparing ancestry estimates based on the AIMs panel to estimates based on genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. The panel provided balanced discriminatory power among the three ancestral populations and accurate estimates of individual ancestry proportions (R2 > 0.9 for ancestral components with significant between-subject variance). Finally, we genotyped samples from 18 populations from Latin America using the AIMs panel and estimated variability in ancestry within and between these populations. This panel and its reference genotype information will be useful resources to explore population history of admixture in Latin America and to correct for the potential effects of population stratification in admixed samples in the region.
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