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Characterizing Race/Ethnicity and Genetic Ancestry for 100,000 Subjects in the Genetic Epidemiology Research on Adult Health and Aging (GERA) Cohort
Authors:Yambazi Banda  Mark N. Kvale  Thomas J. Hoffmann  Stephanie E. Hesselson  Dilrini Ranatunga  Hua Tang  Chiara Sabatti  Lisa A. Croen  Brad P. Dispensa  Mary Henderson  Carlos Iribarren  Eric Jorgenson  Lawrence H. Kushi  Dana Ludwig  Diane Olberg  Charles P. Quesenberry  Jr.   Sarah Rowell  Marianne Sadler  Lori C. Sakoda  Stanley Sciortino  Ling Shen  David Smethurst  Carol P. Somkin  Stephen K. Van Den Eeden  Lawrence Walter  Rachel A. Whitmer  Pui-Yan Kwok  Catherine Schaefer  Neil Risch
Abstract:Using genome-wide genotypes, we characterized the genetic structure of 103,006 participants in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California multi-ethnic Genetic Epidemiology Research on Adult Health and Aging Cohort and analyzed the relationship to self-reported race/ethnicity. Participants endorsed any of 23 race/ethnicity/nationality categories, which were collapsed into seven major race/ethnicity groups. By self-report the cohort is 80.8% white and 19.2% minority; 93.8% endorsed a single race/ethnicity group, while 6.2% endorsed two or more. Principal component (PC) and admixture analyses were generally consistent with prior studies. Approximately 17% of subjects had genetic ancestry from more than one continent, and 12% were genetically admixed, considering only nonadjacent geographical origins. Self-reported whites were spread on a continuum along the first two PCs, indicating extensive mixing among European nationalities. Self-identified East Asian nationalities correlated with genetic clustering, consistent with extensive endogamy. Individuals of mixed East Asian–European genetic ancestry were easily identified; we also observed a modest amount of European genetic ancestry in individuals self-identified as Filipinos. Self-reported African Americans and Latinos showed extensive European and African genetic ancestry, and Native American genetic ancestry for the latter. Among 3741 genetically identified parent–child pairs, 93% were concordant for self-reported race/ethnicity; among 2018 genetically identified full-sib pairs, 96% were concordant; the lower rate for parent–child pairs was largely due to intermarriage. The parent–child pairs revealed a trend toward increasing exogamy over time; the presence in the cohort of individuals endorsing multiple race/ethnicity categories creates interesting challenges and future opportunities for genetic epidemiologic studies.
Keywords:RPGEH GERA   population structure   principal components   admixture   race/ethnicity
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